T
thegrons
Guest
I am well versed in episteology and I have been reading Aquinas in God’s foreknowledge; it seems as though Thomas says that there are no contingent future truths. He says that we humans in the temporal might think that the future is contingent since we cannot foresee with perfect knowledge but God knows all things since He exists outside of time. It appears that to Thomas free will is an illusion of sorts.
So it seems that Thomas is teaching a form of determinism which precludes free will? Or does he teach that God has a special knowledge that somehow allows for what we would call true libertarian free will?
I know that Augustine was a determinist and I think this was part of his Manichean influence but I thought Aquinas always taught a compatiblism?
Does anyone know Aquinas’ views on free will and God’s foreknowledge that they can express in today’s terminology?
Does God know all things or all that is knowable? If the future doesn’t exist, can God know it with perfect knowledge other than induction and if so, how does this knowledge not preclude free will. I know that Thomas tried to get around this paradox of perfect foreknowledge and free will by stating different types of knowledge such as knowledge of possibilities and knowledge of actualization…I got lost in his midevel vernacular…
Any help out there?
Thanks,
John
So it seems that Thomas is teaching a form of determinism which precludes free will? Or does he teach that God has a special knowledge that somehow allows for what we would call true libertarian free will?
I know that Augustine was a determinist and I think this was part of his Manichean influence but I thought Aquinas always taught a compatiblism?
Does anyone know Aquinas’ views on free will and God’s foreknowledge that they can express in today’s terminology?
Does God know all things or all that is knowable? If the future doesn’t exist, can God know it with perfect knowledge other than induction and if so, how does this knowledge not preclude free will. I know that Thomas tried to get around this paradox of perfect foreknowledge and free will by stating different types of knowledge such as knowledge of possibilities and knowledge of actualization…I got lost in his midevel vernacular…
Any help out there?
Thanks,
John