Then how can we be "free beings"? Can you do anything *other* than what God has forever foreseen you doing?
If God has forever known that tomorrow at noon you'll do X, then when the time comes, you can *only* do X. You can't not do it, and you can't do Y instead. You can only do what God has foreseen.
If you make what you feel is a free choice, and God has always known what you'd choose, then the "freedom" is just an illusion, as you made the only decision you could have made. If you could make another choice instead, then the god isn't omniscient.
You keep talking about "God’s omniscience" and "God knows every choice you will freely make," but how do you even know that God even exists? Even if your argument about God knowing what choices you make not taking away your free will is true, it doesn't really mean anything if you can't prove the existence of the God you're talking about.
@Radical_EgoCom @graemearthur As far as we know "free will" isn't a thing as there is no physical mechanism that can deliver it.
The usual way out of this seems to be to say "in practice it's too complicated to calculate what someone will decide to do, so we might as well live our lives as if free will is actually a thing".
Your example is flawed, in that he has a favorite that you know he has. Instead, it's as if he had 5 pairs of shoes, and no matter which he chose, favorite pair or not, you *knew*, not just predicted, what his choice would be.
And if you were truly omniscient, he would choose *only* what you in your omniscience foresaw. It would be impossible for him to make any other choice.
As far as your question, let's not attempt to divert into irrelevant personal matters, such as what scares your interlocutor. Please stick to the issues at hand. Thanks.
If it's impossible to make any other choice than that which was foreseen by an omniscient being, then how is it a free choice? Again, if he could make a different choice than the one foreseen, then the omniscient being isn't really omniscient.
My argument has more to do with omniscience than with god. IMO, omniscience is a nonsensical idea.
With an omniscient god, it's the *freedom* of the choice that's the illusion. The choice cannot be free if it's been eternally foreseen and you can't choose anything else, no matter what your mental processes are leading up to the "choice."
God knows you'll choose X, so you'll choose X. I don't see the freedom in the choice. It's the unworkable idea of omniscience that's causing the problem here.
"Suppose I know with certainty which breakfast cereal you pick tomorrow."
Humans can't know that (or which shoes their child will choose) *with certainty*; we make educated guesses based on experience and probability. This is different from divine omniscience, which is knowing in advance that something will happen, *certainly and unchangingly*. Your god, if he exists, has forever known I'd be typing this now. My choice to do so may *feel* free, but that would be an illusion. The choice was predestined, or else the god isn't omniscient.
Of course, it's more likely that no gods exist...
___________________
#atheism #faith #god