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Does choice imply more than one actual possibility?

God does not actualize any possibilities—because for him there are no unrealized possibilities.
THIS!!!! It is endemic to every one of his attributes in their entirety and purity. But most obviously, it is visible to us in his Aseity.
 
That's because the asserts are sometimes self-contradictory and often nonsensical in other ways.

X is a letter. Y is a letter. Both are true. In mathematical equations X and Y can also represent numbers. That is also true. The onus on you is not to prove or disprove others' positions. As the author of the o the onus is on you to prove your own position. As I stated b4, you might prove my pov incorrect but that would not, in and of itself, prove your position correct unless X and Y are the only two possibilities.... er, I mean, options 😏.

Or repetitive.

X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y,X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y,X&Y, X&Y, X&Y,X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y.................

Yeah, yeah, I get it. X&Y. Next!
Ok. I get it. Let's move on.
 
qvq removed
 
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Just wait until you guys hear Richard Feynman on the nature of time.

You are completely wrong about time. You probably think you know what it is because you look at a watch or you feel yourself getting older. But that isn't time. That's just a sensation, a biological trick.

Most people walk around with this poetic idea in their heads that time is a river. You imagine it flows, sweeping you along from the past through the present and into the future. You think it moved. But here is the problem with that beautiful image. If time is a river, how fast does the river flow? One second per second? That is meaningless. That's like saying a table is one table long. It tells you absolutely nothing about the nature of reality.

The truth is much stranger, much more mechanical and, honestly, a lot less romantic than a flowing stream. Time doesn't flow. Time doesn't push you anywhere. And if you think you have a good grip on how time works just because you can count seconds in your head, you are in for a very rude awakening.

“If time is a dimension,” he said, “then the past, the present, and the future all exist simultaneously. Think of a movie reel. You watch the movie frame by frame, so it feels like a story unfolding. But if you hold the reel in your hand, the end of the movie exists at the same time as the beginning.”

Watch the rest of the video here (00:23:11).
When I found time, I tried to watch the video, but YouTube says, "this video is private". Is there a title I can look up on YouTube? I have watched several of Feynman's videos and they are fascinating, and one of them in particular helped me at least begin to understand how time relates to the universe, and the relativity of the speed of light as a different way to consider the structure of the universe.
 
Jesus said, “With God all things are possible” (Matt 19:26).

Indeed. But how does that relate to our dispute? I said that for God there are no unrealized possibilities awaiting to be actualized. Is this passage supposed to prove there are? Jesus is contrasting human inability with divine power, not asserting the existence of possibilities that God actualizes.

In everyday speech: "I like you" versus "I am not like my cat."

A curious thing about English, right? A single word (like) can mean two different things, and two different words (choose, select) can mean the same thing. As I said, in everyday speech there is no meaningful difference between choose and select.

I am specifically defining "choose" and "select" and using them correctly.

Well, I don’t think you are using them correctly. You persist in equivocating in a way not beholden to linguistics or grammar. In this recent response from you, for example, you said choose relates to “any number of possibilities” and select relates to “a list of specific available options”—failing to acknowledge that these are interchangeable (precisely because these words are largely synonymous). One can choose from “a list of specific available options,” and one can select from “any number of possibilities.”

In the vegetable analogy, the cook chose them and you have a selection, not a choice.

Again, these are largely interchangeable—even here. Observe: The cook selected certain vegetables as sides in the menu, giving the patron a choice in which vegetable to eat.
 
When I found time, I tried to watch the video, but YouTube says, "this video is private". Is there a title I can look up on YouTube? I have watched several of Feynman's videos and they are fascinating, and one of them in particular helped me at least begin to understand how time relates to the universe, and the relativity of the speed of light as a different way to consider the structure of the universe.

Here is the same talk, but in this video it is someone reading it. So, it's not Feynman talking but it's the same talk.
 
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Here is the same talk, but in this video it is someone reading it. So, it's not Feynman talking but it's the same talk.
Thanks. (Man! that bot voice method of reading is irritating. It pauses all the wrong times, and even reads misprints phonetically.) I found this one more informatively useful (and much shorter) on that same subject. I don't know how to put new words to the link, and fix it where it doesn't present as a video. I'll enter it per the rules under the forum: Youtube/Favorite Videos/Music as "Feynman and time".
 
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Josheb said:
God isn't influencing; He is controlling EVERYTHING.

Not to dispute with either of you, nor to defend a position, nor specifically to point out that @Josheb may have been attempting to represent my view and not his, here.....
That is exactly what I was doing.

This op, and many of the other posts on the subject are "wordy," and attempt to cover multiple bases (which causes difficulty confusion and misunderstanding) when starting with a thesis statement or singling out the core belief would (probably) be more effective. That is why I examined a couple of threads and selected very blunt, simple, direct statements stating the kind of determinism asserted in this op. There's always the possibility the viewpoint changes. Evolution of thought does occur. In such cases the solution is simply to restate one's viewpoint, amending what has previously been posted.

That didn't happen here.

The same position has been held across multiple discussions. The same applies to the content below.
, (just in case a reader misunderstands), but to further the conversation:

While there is a huge difference from the self-interested, self-centered and temporally-governed limited human POV, between "influence" and "control", if either of them are truly applicable to what God does with his creation, as opposed to a deistic notion of God beginning things and (but for occasional interventions) leaving them to develop on their own, I'd have to say that there is no difference, except as we must use such words in discussing and adjusting our thinking.

Logically, and secularly, to begin something (for example, the 'Big Bang', or the placing of a cup of water in my microwave to heat it for tea), causes EVERY resulting effect, even down long chains of causation. Every result 'was in the loins' of that cause. This I think we all three, and probably most readers will agree on. IF, (which I deny), the Big Bang was the beginning of all things, then the fact that I stubbed my toe and said words I'm not proud of, and my tea spilled and I chose to go make more, are all results of the big bang, AND, of all the myriad other causes relevant to those things (which are also results of the Big Bang). As I have pointed at before, one Science Reporter poetically pointed out, the seeds of all things we see today were in the Big Bang.

That is deterministic, both intimately and meticulously. That grand scales result, and that God has a particular resulting end to his decree does not allow for anything between the beginning and end to happen uncaused, nor —reasoning via the above juxtaposed with God's omniscience— even unintended. And, this determining MUST necessarily include the dynamics of interactions.

Now, if anyone can demonstrate how it is possible for something besides first cause to happen without being caused to happen, be my guest. If there is some strange way to consider "what is" to be other than "came to be", (other than God himself, of course), please explain it. Not even modern cosmology makes that claim, as far as I know, but for their descriptions of speculative constructions.
Water, microwaves and letters or numbers do not have volition. The existence of two or more wills matters..... especially if can establish new causation, even more so if that is God's intent from the beginning.
Now, if anyone can demonstrate how meticulous causation rules out the emotions, intelligent considerations, and force of will of sentient creatures, please have at it —particularly if you can do so by way of definitions that do not assume validity to human ways of thinking. After all, we are kinda stuck with those words. (Kudos to @QVQ for trying to wobble that dependence.)
And that is part of the problem to be solved. That rhetorical request is a red herring for multiple reasons. 1) It shifts the onus away from the op having to prove its position (especially in context of all the disagreement it has received by multiple posters), 2) It seeks to avoid proof of its own position at the expense of someone else's inability to prove an alternative (which is just ironic), 3) It assumes language is different and, therefore, the difference is relevant, 4) This faux request has been posted and addressed multiple times without effect, making it one of many argumentum ad nauseam.

In other words, the op remains unproven and the effort to do so remains laden with self-contradiction, fallacy, and avoidance.


Part of the problem is that this debate (like that of soteriology) has been framed in its poles or the extremes. Creation MUST be either all, entirely, completely controlled and nothing else can explain creation because to do so would compromise divine might and sovereignty, or creation MUST be completely autonomous and nothing else can explain creation because to do so would compromise human culpability, make God a despot, the language of scripture is meaningless and we therefore then left in the blinding utter darkness of ignorance because we cannot possibly fathom the meaning of God's words as God uses them or we can invent any meaning we mean and attribute it to God.

That entire thing is a mess.

It's much easier to observe the problems on the human-centric side of that debate but meticulous determinism also has its obvious flaws. Hence the debate. Compatibilists have attempted to find the neglected middle and the Reform-minded among them have done so preserving and emphasizing divine sovereignty over human volitional agency. Sadly, much of the reasoning allowing human weight has neglected or ignored the pre-disobedient/post-disobedient divide found in scripture. The mere mention of the single pre-disobedient decision made in scripture cause the thread to derail and difficulty getting it back on topic. Arguments over the meaning of words would be readily addressed and easily resolved if and when God's definitions are found and provided but it appears this op wants and enjoys the silence of God and uses it as a defense against criticism. Scripture uses the words "life" and "death" in multiple ways and the reason we know that is because scripture also defines all the uses for us. That does not exist with the words "choice," and "possibility," so determinists think they've achieved something or gotten away with their defense when it amounts to an argument from silence and does nothing to address the hole in the case for determinism.

As far as I can tell from the posts, there are no indeterminists present in the (non-)discussion. We all believe in some degree of determinism. In theory, we should be able to reason through the correct degree of determinism among ourselves but that would mean every single one of us would probably 1) have to change something in our own understanding and 2) let go of previously held doctrinal and sectarian allegiances without insulting each other.

For centuries the soteriological debate was framed entirely as a matter of volition. Very few, if any, asked, "What if the sinner's volition is irrelevant?" and answered that question, "The sinner's will is not relevant." The synergist cannot tolerate that at all because it falls on the monergist side of the divide and the monergist can tolerate it only as far as regeneration precedes faith while they still engage the debate over volition when their response should be, "Meh." The minute the question is asked both sides become allied in resistance to the answer and a slew of what-abouts ensue. It doesn't help that some/many on both sides acting like the unsaved.

What if the nature of creation is not found in the poles? What if it is not found in a dichotomized causality? Fodder for another op because this op is about proving determinism and we're seven pages in and this op has not provided an impeccable case proving its position. This op started with a circular question. Words mean what they mean when God uses them, and the meaning of the word "choice" means - not implies - more than one possibility exists. It's ironic because western dictionaries are informed by the Bible. The idea Oxford or Merriam's has invented a definition apart from God is ironic and untenable on multiple levels if the goal is to prove determinism. That argument words have different meaning when used by God and none of us do nor can know the truth was always a nonsensical argument.
 
Ok. I get it. Let's move on.
That would require you to stop repeating the same content (whether in different words or the same). We're all waiting on you to address the specifics of our posts.
 
Water, microwaves and letters or numbers do not have volition. The existence of two or more wills matters..... especially if can establish new causation, even more so if that is God's intent from the beginning.
Nobody I know here is saying that wills do not matter. But there is only one will that can establish new causation. It is logically self-contradictory, if God is first cause, to say that any creature/any sentient (other than God)/any other will, can cause or be a new first-cause by God's intent. It is also anthropomorphic. But if my opponent only means that the will of sentient creatures does have effects, I agree completely. That the lines of cause and effect branch out at the point of decision, is not disputed. I don't think I have ever said otherwise.
Part of the problem is that this debate (like that of soteriology) has been framed in its poles or the extremes. Creation MUST be either all, entirely, completely controlled and nothing else can explain creation because to do so would compromise divine might and sovereignty, or creation MUST be completely autonomous and nothing else can explain creation because to do so would compromise human culpability, make God a despot, the language of scripture is meaningless and we therefore then left in the blinding utter darkness of ignorance because we cannot possibly fathom the meaning of God's words as God uses them or we can invent any meaning we mean and attribute it to God.

That entire thing is a mess.
I think only one reader here has claimed that it is framed at its extremes. I wonder what word there is for that psychological phenomenon, that tends to take what it hears and express it back as an extreme. I am a compatibilist, much as I dislike that handle, (because I am not quite in agreement with what some people think is compatibilism). I do indeed claim the one extreme (determinism) but not at the expense of the fact of and effects of the volition of the creature. I also do not think that all those who disagree with me are mere deists (the other extreme), nor that they all claim creation (nor even willed creatures) must be completely autonomous.
It's much easier to observe the problems on the human-centric side of that debate but meticulous determinism also has its obvious flaws.
At this point in this contention, I hesitate to ask anyone to demonstrate (not just describe by way of definition of words, nor by presuppositions that are supported by those same presuppositions) any logical flaws of meticulous determinism. If this contentious communication continues I may as well just shut this thread down.
Hence the debate. Compatibilists have attempted to find the neglected middle and the Reform-minded among them have done so preserving and emphasizing divine sovereignty over human volitional agency. Sadly, much of the reasoning allowing human weight has neglected or ignored the pre-disobedient/post-disobedient divide found in scripture. The mere mention of the single pre-disobedient decision made in scripture cause the thread to derail and difficulty getting it back on topic. Arguments over the meaning of words would be readily addressed and easily resolved if and when God's definitions are found and provided but it appears this op wants and enjoys the silence of God and uses it as a defense against criticism. Scripture uses the words "life" and "death" in multiple ways and the reason we know that is because scripture also defines all the uses for us. That does not exist with the words "choice," and "possibility," so determinists think they've achieved something or gotten away with their defense when it amounts to an argument from silence and does nothing to address the hole in the case for determinism.
Admittedly, determinism has for its argument, its own presupposition(s), as does any other framework, that all things post-first-cause's-creating are effects of that creating. The determinist, if he even considers that he is depending on that presupposition, finds it an altogether logical and reasonable claim, and axiomatic. If, (with which I disagree), that presupposition logically results in no valid choice of the will, then ...but I hesitate to ask again. I do not wish to extend contentious discourse.
As far as I can tell from the posts, there are no indeterminists present in the (non-)discussion. We all believe in some degree of determinism. In theory, we should be able to reason through the correct degree of determinism among ourselves but that would mean every single one of us would probably 1) have to change something in our own understanding and 2) let go of previously held doctrinal and sectarian allegiances without insulting each other.
Why must determinism be a matter of degree? I happily, even joyfully, insist that the truth is not dependent on anything man can come up with to handle God's deeds and ways. I don't even like the term, 'determinism'. I certainly don't think my rendition of the facts as I see them fit what God sees. I'm only saying "this is what my reason comes up with". I can do no other, so far. The truth does not accommodate itself to anything we think, no matter how accurate, articulate or apt our thoughts and descriptions are. The truth does not fit on any scale between two man-described extremes.

Your 1) and 2) above are noble endeavors indeed.
For centuries the soteriological debate was framed entirely as a matter of volition. Very few, if any, asked, "What if the sinner's volition is irrelevant?" and answered that question, "The sinner's will is not relevant." The synergist cannot tolerate that at all because it falls on the monergist side of the divide and the monergist can tolerate it only as far as regeneration precedes faith while they still engage the debate over volition when their response should be, "Meh." The minute the question is asked both sides become allied in resistance to the answer and a slew of what-abouts ensue. It doesn't help that some/many on both sides acting like the unsaved.
I mean this sincerely: I would like to hear your claim I thought I heard you make, not that the sinner's will is irrelevant, but that the will [of the creature] is irrelevant, juxtaposed with the claim that the fact of the creature's will must not be denied in logical determinism. Hopefully, I heard you wrong, and you only intended what you said in the context of soteriology and referred to the sinner's will, and not human volition in general. If that is all you meant, I concur. In monergism, the sinner's will is not violated, but God by himself gives the sinner new birth, 'from above', by which the sinner's will is rendered no longer at enmity with God. The sinner's will is regenerated, but was irrelevant in causing that regeneration.
What if the nature of creation is not found in the poles? What if it is not found in a dichotomized causality? Fodder for another op because this op is about proving determinism and we're seven pages in and this op has not provided an impeccable case proving its position. This op started with a circular question. Words mean what they mean when God uses them, and the meaning of the word "choice" means - not implies - more than one possibility exists. It's ironic because western dictionaries are informed by the Bible. The idea Oxford or Merriam's has invented a definition apart from God is ironic and untenable on multiple levels if the goal is to prove determinism. That argument words have different meaning when used by God and none of us do nor can know the truth was always a nonsensical argument.
I didn't say they developed their definitions apart from God. I said they developed definitions that describe man's point of view. They do not describe FACT, as such, but what man thinks of fact.

As an analogy, the science writers like to say that some particles pop in and out of existence by themselves and randomly, and even the math used to describe the phenomenon attempts to formulate predictability. It is an admission of, "We don't know". That math may be more useful for that purpose of making predictions than classical physics is, but it does not describe what God sees. We use words like, 'possible', because WE don't know.

My opponent here wishes to say that I have not demonstrated a reasonable argument in support of my version of determinism, though I demand the same of my opposition. Granted, I presuppose comprehensive, meticulous and intimate causation post-creation (whether via creation or via immanence or both). I think I have even defended that presupposition sufficiently, but I'll back off of that, unless that question is further pursued by my opposition. But if logic follows that presupposition, I find no alternative but to believe that even our wills, and all decisions made by our wills, minds and bodies are caused, without need to suppose anything resembling first-cause status to our wills. If, on the other hand, logic does not follow that presupposition, I have yet to hear anything to deny my thesis, except by denial of that presupposition.

My opponent has proposed as axiomatic, put simply, that strict* determinism denies choice. I find that a statement by fiat alone. It does not replace my presupposition. It only ignores it. *'Strict' is my word, there. I don't remember what word or phrase or what my opponent used in describing the sort of determinism he thinks I espouse, and I'm too lazy to go look for it.
 
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Here is the same talk, but in this video it is someone reading it. So, it's not Feynman talking but it's the same talk.
If you were to apply your critical reasoning skills to what Feynman says in that video, where would you find fault? Watch it again as if you've never heard it before and are skeptical of every word. Where do the faults, if any, exist? List them for me. Just list them (not looking for explanations why they are faults).
Nobody I know here is saying that wills do not matter. But there is only one will that can establish new causation. It is logically self-contradictory, if God is first cause, to say that any creature/any sentient (other than God)/any other will, can cause or be a new first-cause by God's intent. It is also anthropomorphic. But if my opponent only means that the will of sentient creatures does have effects, I agree completely. That the lines of cause and effect branch out at the point of decision, is not disputed. I don't think I have ever said otherwise.

I think only one reader here has claimed that it is framed at its extremes. I wonder what word there is for that psychological phenomenon, that tends to take what it hears and express it back as an extreme. I am a compatibilist, much as I dislike that handle, (because I am not quite in agreement with what some people think is compatibilism). I do indeed claim the one extreme (determinism) but not at the expense of the fact of and effects of the volition of the creature. I also do not think that all those who disagree with me are mere deists (the other extreme), nor that they all claim creation (nor even willed creatures) must be completely autonomous.

At this point in this contention, I hesitate to ask anyone to demonstrate (not just describe by way of definition of words, nor by presuppositions that are supported by those same presuppositions) any logical flaws of meticulous determinism. If this contentious communication continues I may as well just shut this thread down.

Admittedly, determinism has for its argument, its own presupposition(s), as does any other framework, that all things post-first-cause's-creating are effects of that creating. The determinist, if he even considers that he is depending on that presupposition, finds it an altogether logical and reasonable claim, and axiomatic. If, (with which I disagree), that presupposition logically results in no valid choice of the will, then ...but I hesitate to ask again. I do not wish to extend contentious discourse.

Why must determinism be a matter of degree? I happily, even joyfully, insist that the truth is not dependent on anything man can come up with to handle God's deeds and ways. I don't even like the term, 'determinism'. I certainly don't think my rendition of the facts as I see them fit what God sees. I'm only saying "this is what my reason comes up with". I can do no other, so far. The truth does not accommodate itself to anything we think, no matter how accurate, articulate or apt our thoughts and descriptions are. The truth does not fit on any scale between two man-described extremes.

Your 1) and 2) above are noble endeavors indeed.

I mean this sincerely: I would like to hear your claim I thought I heard you make, not that the sinner's will is irrelevant, but that the will [of the creature] is irrelevant, juxtaposed with the claim that the fact of the creature's will must not be denied in logical determinism. Hopefully, I heard you wrong, and you only intended what you said in the context of soteriology and referred to the sinner's will, and not human volition in general. If that is all you meant, I concur. In monergism, the sinner's will is not violated, but God by himself gives the sinner new birth, 'from above', by which the sinner's will is rendered no longer at enmity with God. The sinner's will is regenerated, but was irrelevant in causing that regeneration.

I didn't say they developed their definitions apart from God. I said they developed definitions that describe man's point of view. They do not describe FACT, as such, but what man thinks of fact.

As an analogy, the science writers like to say that some particles pop in and out of existence by themselves and randomly, and even the math used to describe the phenomenon attempts to formulate predictability. It is an admission of, "We don't know". That math may be more useful for that purpose of making predictions than classical physics is, but it does not describe what God sees. We use words like, 'possible', because WE don't know.

My opponent here wishes to say that I have not demonstrated a reasonable argument in support of my version of determinism, though I demand the same of my opposition. Granted, I presuppose comprehensive, meticulous and intimate causation post-creation (whether via creation or via immanence or both). I think I have even defended that presupposition sufficiently, but I'll back off of that, unless that question is further pursued by my opposition. But if logic follows that presupposition, I find no alternative but to believe that even our wills, and all decisions made by our wills, minds and bodies are caused, without need to suppose anything resembling first-cause status to our wills. If, on the other hand, logic does not follow that presupposition, I have yet to hear anything to deny my thesis, except by denial of that presupposition.

My opponent has proposed as axiomatic, put simply, that strict* determinism denies choice. I find that a statement by fiat alone. It does not replace my presupposition. It only ignores it. *'Strict' is my word, there. I don't remember what word or phrase or what my opponent used in describing the sort of determinism he thinks I espouse, and I'm too lazy to go look for it.
Wow. What I posted was not correctly understood at all.
Nobody I know here is saying that wills do not matter...
I never said anyone did, but if God meticulously determines everything then wills do not matter. Whether anyone said it or not is moot because the irrelevance of the will is the logically necessary conclusion to strict meticulous determinism.
I didn't say they developed their definitions apart from God.... I said they developed definitions that describe man's point of view. They do not describe FACT, as such, but what man thinks of fact.
Which is just a rewording of definitions were developed apart from God!!!!! If the dictionary definition of words describes man's pov, and only man's pov, then that is, ironically, by definition, a definition apart from God. Alternatively, if the dictionary definition of a word is either describing the meaning as God has used the word, or there is an overlap between the two (God and man's understanding), then the entire argument based on language and definitions is baseless. I have described to you many times the hows and why language can be understood as a knowable and understandable revelation from God that He intended to be understood.
I mean this sincerely: I would like to hear your claim I thought I heard you make, not that the sinner's will is irrelevant, but that the will [of the creature] is irrelevant, juxtaposed with the claim that the fact of the creature's will must not be denied in logical determinism.
If that were true then we'd all read evidence consistent with that claim. The fact is I posted alternative views and the cases supporting them in multiple threads, including the op from which this one was birthed and my posts were frequently misrepresented, none of the misrepresentations were ever corrected (despite the request to do so), and few, if any, of the specifics were addressed (as is the case in this thread). Instead, ad nauseam is the response.

That's not evidence of sincere interest.
 
makesends said:
Nobody I know here is saying that wills do not matter...
I never said anyone did, but if God meticulously determines everything then wills do not matter. Whether anyone said it or not is moot because the irrelevance of the will is the logically necessary conclusion to strict meticulous determinism.
Proof by fiat, and Repetition ad nauseum.

makesends said:
I didn't say they developed their definitions apart from God.... I said they developed definitions that describe man's point of view. They do not describe FACT, as such, but what man thinks of fact.
Which is just a rewording of definitions were developed apart from God!!!!! If the dictionary definition of words describes man's pov, and only man's pov, then that is, ironically, by definition, a definition apart from God. Alternatively, if the dictionary definition of a word is either describing the meaning as God has used the word, or there is an overlap between the two (God and man's understanding), then the entire argument based on language and definitions is baseless. I have described to you many times the hows and why language can be understood as a knowable and understandable revelation from God that He intended to be understood.
That's a sloughing of language.

I would be interested, however, if you would begin a new thread on that last: ("the hows and why language can be understood as a knowable and understandable revelation from God that He intended to be understood.")
If that were true then we'd all read evidence consistent with that claim. The fact is I posted alternative views and the cases supporting them in multiple threads, including the op from which this one was birthed and my posts were frequently misrepresented, none of the misrepresentations were ever corrected (despite the request to do so), and few, if any, of the specifics were addressed (as is the case in this thread). Instead, ad nauseam is the response.

That's not evidence of sincere interest.
Does the one repetition ad nauseum trump the other?
 
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This has been asserted, in various ways and in many forums over the years, (and no doubt over thousands of years, too): "If God intentionally causes all things, then wills do not matter. The irrelevance of the will is the logically necessary conclusion to strict meticulous determinism."


This argument places the will of man on an existential level with the will of God. I don't mean of equal power and virtue, but a level of operation, and result, though we admit his are intentional in total, while ours are intentional in ignorance, habit and desire. The notion of God speaking a story into existence in which we are the characters is somewhat analogous to what I believe, except that this 'story' is real. He is that much above us.

Consider the tension, the paradox if you will, between God risking all and yet all along knowing as he planned and intended and for which he created, that EVERYTHING he planned will indeed come to pass. I see him driving his own people and the course of the universe so close to utter disaster, sometimes seemingly over the edge, yet never relinquishing the future. I see in the face of the power of his burning purity, his tenderness, patience and infinite touch with those to whom he chose to show mercy. All those things are true and real, and this too, that he missed no detail in planning. Nothing can come to pass without his intending it to come to pass. And (among very many other things) our wills are part of what he intended, and are what he uses to bring to pass all related effects. He is that much above us. He is not like us.

As much as his [mode of] existence is above our existence and his sentience is above ours, so his will is above our will. They are two different things, and we are anthropomorphizing to say otherwise.
 
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If you were to apply your critical reasoning skills to what Feynman says in that video, where would you find fault? Watch it again as if you've never heard it before and are skeptical of every word. Where do the faults, if any, exist? List them for me. Just list them. (Not looking for explanations why they are faults.)

I would accept homework assignments from you if we had a history of you engaging my content with anything other than contentious polemics (where your aim seems to be refuting or discrediting my viewpoint, often with aggressive or controversial rhetoric), if your interactions with me usually displayed a genuine interest in understanding my view and how I reached it.

But we don’t have that history.
 
makesends said:
Nobody I know here is saying that wills do not matter...

Proof by fiat, and Repetition ad nauseum.

makesends said:
I didn't say they developed their definitions apart from God.... I said they developed definitions that describe man's point of view. They do not describe FACT, as such, but what man thinks of fact.

That's a sloughing of language.

I would be interested, however, if you would begin a new thread on that last: ("the hows and why language can be understood as a knowable and understandable revelation from God that He intended to be understood.")

Does the one repetition ad nauseum trump the other?
It is difficult to fathom the depth of inanity in this post. As far as the "sloughing of language goes," you are the one who has repeatedly (across multiple threads) claimed language is different with God and humans either do not or cannot gasp God's meaning. That is pure dross for the reasons I have already explained and you've ignored. I've already addressed the multiple requests to explain things to you, and that too has been ignored. Uniformly asking that posted concerns be addressed as a response to repetitious of contradictions and failures to follow one's own logic through to its logically necessary conclusions (strict, meticulous determinism negates choice) is not an ad nauseam argument and using tu quoque as a defense is fallacious.

God determines everything but does a choice imply more than one actual possibility?
The word "choice" literally means more than one possibility or option exists. The question is circular.
God determines everything so the words have different meaning to him and humans don't understand.
Revelation is for the purpose of revealing; it's meant to be understood.
God determines everything so the only possibility that can exist is what God chose.
That is a post hoc argument.
God determines everything so the only possibility that can exist is what God chose.
That precludes the question asked.
God determines everything so the only possibility that can exist is what God chose, and I am not denying human will.
You are if God determines everything and there are other contradictions in the defense of this op.
God determines everything so the only possibility that can exist is what God chose so explain to me your pov.
No, that is an attempt to shift the onus away from the fact none of my concerns have been addressed. Furthermore, I have explained my position and it's either been ignored or misrepresented. I'm not doing that again.
God determines everything so the only possibility that can exist is what God chose.
You're repeating yourself and not addressing the points above.
God determines everything so the only possibility that can exist is what God chose. Does one ad nauseam trump another?

Bye
 
I would accept homework assignments from you if we had a history of you engaging my content with anything other than contentious polemics (where your aim seems to be refuting or discrediting my viewpoint, often with aggressive or controversial rhetoric), if your interactions with me usually displayed a genuine interest in understanding my view and how I reached it.
Understandable. That's too bad because I'll bet we'd share common concerns about Feynman's view of time (as expressed in the linked-to video). For example, Feynman makes several comments about time (we do not know what it is, the nature of time is a matter for philosophers, time is a "biological hallucination," time is a measure of change, times is a dimension, etc.) that, when combined, do not reconcile with one another. Then, when he states the job of physics is to be operational and ask, "How we measure time?" which means something that doesn't exist, something that is a delusion, is being measured. He concludes time is simply a way of ordering events. That's what he says. If we accept his definition of time, "Time is a measure of change," and time is simply a way of ordering events then that certainly applies to this op. I hope we could also agree events do happen so there is, therefore, something there to be measured and it is not an hallucination.

Perhaps more importantly, in Feynman's day most physicists, especially among the atheists like Feynman, it was believed the universe was all there is; nothing exists outside the universe and physics could and would account for everything therein. That is not a view currently held in the science of physics and it is not a viewpoint held by Christians.
But we don’t have that history.
We could if we both endeavored to change. Ironic given the topic.




How about this: Without looking it up, do you know what dimensions 5 through 10 are in String Theory? (or the 11 in M-Theory, if you prefer)?
 
God determines everything but does a choice imply more than one actual possibility?
The word "choice" literally means more than one possibility or option exists. The question is circular.
But, 'possibility' and 'option' do not mean the same thing. The question is valid.
God determines everything so the words have different meaning to him and humans don't understand.
Revelation is for the purpose of revealing; it's meant to be understood.
Besides misrepresenting what I said, I agree revelation is for the purpose of revealing; it is not an attempt at revealing—it is revealing. However, it is not a total revealing until it is a total revealing. The understanding progresses.
God determines everything so the only possibility that can exist is what God chose.
That is a post hoc argument.
Therefore invalid? No. When we see what happens we know God ordained it, post hoc. When we get to Heaven we will all say, "OH!" post hoc. Now if you can demonstrate to me how it can be that it was in fact possible that something else happen, besides using man's definitions of man's concepts drawn on man's ways of thinking, have at it.
God determines everything so the only possibility that can exist is what God chose.
That precludes the question asked.
God's choice is all that can happen. It precludes only the notion that anything else could have happened. If your objection here is the use of the word, 'choice', when applied to God, it flips right back around to what I said about the definition of choice.
God determines everything so the only possibility that can exist is what God chose, and I am not denying human will.
You are if God determines everything and there are other contradictions in the defense of this op.
The perceived contradictions are only in your perception, by way of the assumption you continue to employ, that meticulous determinism rules out choice. Thus, your argument is circular, and your complaints with it.
God determines everything so the only possibility that can exist is what God chose so explain to me your pov.
No, that is an attempt to shift the onus away from the fact none of my concerns have been addressed. Furthermore, I have explained my position and it's either been ignored or misrepresented. I'm not doing that again.
I have addressed your concerns, which addressing you have dismissed out of hand. It is one thing to say that your opponent is wrong. It is another to say that your opponent has not answered you.
God determines everything so the only possibility that can exist is what God chose.
You're repeating yourself and not addressing the points above.
 
But, 'possibility' and 'option' do not mean the same thing. The question is valid.
Repeating the point is not valid. The distinctions between possibility and option were addressed (see Post 31, as well).... and then ignored. with an obfuscation about what God "sees." All that content is sitting idle in the thread unaddressed by you except to repetitiously post contradictions and straw men.
X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y,X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y,X&Y, X&Y, X&Y,X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y, X&Y.................

Yeah, yeah, I get it. X&Y. Next!
Ok. I get it. Let's move on.
Apparently, you do not and have not.


If God meticulously determines everything then there are not actual choices because a choice is, by definition, a condition in which two or more options, each of which may realize completely different outcomes, exists. The question asked in the o's title is circular if choices exist and meaningless if God determines everything.
 
Understandable. That's too bad because I'll bet we'd share common concerns about Feynman's view of time (as expressed in the linked-to video). For example, Feynman makes several comments about time (we do not know what it is, the nature of time is a matter for philosophers, time is a "biological hallucination," time is a measure of change, times is a dimension, etc.) that, when combined, do not reconcile with one another. Then, when he states the job of physics is to be operational and ask, "How we measure time?" which means something that doesn't exist, something that is a delusion, is being measured. He concludes time is simply a way of ordering events. That's what he says. If we accept his definition of time, "Time is a measure of change," and time is simply a way of ordering events then that certainly applies to this op. I hope we could also agree events do happen so there is, therefore, something there to be measured and it is not an hallucination.

Perhaps more importantly, in Feynman's day most physicists, especially among the atheists like Feynman, it was believed the universe was all there is; nothing exists outside the universe and physics could and would account for everything therein. That is not a view currently held in the science of physics and it is not a viewpoint held by Christians.

We could if we both endeavored to change. Ironic given the topic.




How about this: Without looking it up, do you know what dimensions 5 through 10 are in String Theory? (or the 11 in M-Theory, if you prefer)?
Without contention, I'm asking, How does this tangent relate to the OP? I'm genuinely curious. I wondered when you asked @John Bauer if he found problems in Feynman's video.

We went here earlier as a way to deal theoretically/abstract with what is and what is not possible. Is this an attempt to discredit that earlier reference? I.e is this perhaps trying to point out that Feynman's view may well be irrelevant?
 
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