The whole "omniscience + free will" thing is contradictory, but if we assume that we have free will then that limits God's omniscience. "Here's a test, maybe they'll pass it, maybe not, let's find out." On the other hand, take away free will and there's not much point (from God's perspective) to our existence - he knows from day one what we're going to do, so he might as well short-circuit the whole experiment and send everybody (including everybody yet to be born) to heaven or hell immediately.
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[SERIOUS] Is Kidicious getting dumber?
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Originally posted by Aeson View PostYou didn't create Lincoln knowing what he would do before he did it though...
JMJon Miller-
I AM.CANADIAN
GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.
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Originally posted by Jon Miller View PostThat isn't logical at all.
Just because I know what Lincoln chose does not mean that he didn't have free will to choose what he did.
JMIn Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.
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Time travel (and things like "existing outside of time") is nonsensical when it comes to causality, free will, and all that good stuff. If I were writing a time travel story then the act of traveling back in time (after having traveled to the future to glean knowledge of what will come to pass) would inject enough chaos into the system that the knowledge gained from the future would be of limited value; in addition, my time travel story would probably include some quantum tomfoolery that would inject chaos all throughout the system independent of the chaos I injected by traveling back in time.<p style="font-size:1024px">HTML is disabled in signatures </p>
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Originally posted by gribbler View PostIf you built a time machine and visited the future and found out some stuff about what people did in the intermediate time period and then returned to the present would that negate free will?
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Originally posted by gribbler View PostHow does free will make time travel impossible? That doesn't make sense.
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Originally posted by loinburger View PostTime travel (and things like "existing outside of time") is nonsensical when it comes to causality, free will, and all that good stuff. If I were writing a time travel story then the act of traveling back in time (after having traveled to the future to glean knowledge of what will come to pass) would inject enough chaos into the system that the knowledge gained from the future would be of limited value; in addition, my time travel story would probably include some quantum tomfoolery that would inject chaos all throughout the system independent of the chaos I injected by traveling back in time.
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Originally posted by Aeson View PostBecause time travel like you are talking about (eg. you can go visit and come back and know what's going to happen) would necessitate that the future is already fixed. As such there can be no deviation from the actions that are predestined, and that's definitely not "free will".
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