slowmutant wrote:
Free will cannot be absolute if there exists even a smidgen of predestination. Likewise, predestination cannot be absolute if there is even a smidgen of free will.
By the Calvinist definition of "predestination" this appears to be absolutely true. This doesn't, however, rule out the possibility of a non-Calvinist foreordained life work or mission. If you look at "predestination" as merely as a goal, obligation, plan and opportunity rather than the only possible outcome, then you can have a destiny and still have free will. This also means, of course, that you could defy, fail, or fall short of this destiny. Is seems then, that in order for free will to exist, then at least some aspects of destiny cannot be absolute.
Orwell wrote:
Unless you're an Open Theist, I'll go ahead and say that any non-Calvinist doctrine is false because of absurd internal contradictions.
Open theism? Are you referring, perhaps, to the paradox between omniscience and free will? (Does that paradox have an accepted name btw?) It's true that some conceptions about God are completely nonsensical. I don't interpret that to mean that God is nonsensical or utterly incomprehensible, just that the conceptions are at least partially wrong. Surely some aspects of God are beyond mortal understanding, but that doesn't mean God is self-contradictory. God is a God of order, after all.
I think that particular paradox comes from a misunderstanding of Time and Eternity. The premise of the paradox is as follows: if God is all-knowing, knowing the past, present and future, then there can be no free will, because the future is already known, therefore the future has already been determined. Worse, God can't also be omnipotent, because if God knows the future with certainty it cannot be changed. Since God is supposed to be both, it's a contradiction!
The resolution is actually pretty simple though. Omniscience doesn't mean God is all-knowing, but rather that God knows all. The distinction is subtle, but important. All-knowing means perceiving past, present and future in
the past. Like a
memory. There is an implicit assumption in the above argument that the past cannot be changed, even by God. It is fixed, absolute, static. I see no reason why God must be subject to this limitation.
The other option, that God knows all, means God perceives the past, present and future
in the present. Like a
sense. That means that just because God sees (not saw) you doing something (even if it's in the future from your perspective), doesn't mean God made you do it. That also implies that the past is as mutable as the present from God's perspective.
But wait, mutability, one might say, requires the passage of time, and therefore a past? Not necessarily, I say, it seems God exists outside of time
as we know it, but that does
not imply stasis. Some principles of time may still apply, just not the limitations of endpoints (a beginning and end) or even a single temporal dimension. I'll call this underlying reality Eternity, and the one dimensional fragment of it Time.
I therefore must reject the notion of a completely static immutable God as nonsensical and contradictory to the true principles of free will and omnipotence of God. While I'm certain that there are aspects of perfection that God will never choose to abandon (making God unchangeable in certain respects), there are other aspects of God that continue to progress. God may continue to create, for example, and thus continue to progress and change that way.
Before you reject the notion of multiple temporal dimensions as absurd, consider that string theory posits the existence of multiple extra compactified spacetime dimensions (beyond the 3 space and 1 time we are familiar with). It is still not clear how many of those extra spacetime dimensions are space, and how many of them are time. (Or are they something else altogether?)
The possibility occurs to me then, that for us to truly have free will, a part of us must also be Eternal, or exist beyond the limitations of this bounded, one-dimensional Time as we know it.
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Everything's related if you look deep enough...