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Prodigal_Son
Guest
I don’t follow this. It seems to me that a choice within parameters is still a choice. If you mean by “free will” the capacity to do absolutely anything at our whim, then obviously we don’t have free will. I couldn’t freely choose to fly like Superman, because I don’t have the potential to do so – that is, it isn’t in my parameters.And if our choice is only possible if it is allowed by God (His sacrifice, in your view) then how is it actually a free choice? It’s just like the parameters of the hypothetical AI, which can make the sorts of choices it was designed for, but not ones the programmer didn’t write in, or maybe specifically made impossible (like cause no purposeful harm to living things or something).
By “free will”, I mean the capacity to make certain choices that are not causally necessitated by prior events. If my father gives me a choice of chocolate or vanilla ice cream, the fact that strawberry was not an option does not make it any less a choice.
Two points here:Because the kind of free will Christians mean is contra-causal free will (i.e. contrary to the laws of physics that govern all of nature, if you don’t believe in contra-causal free will, then you’d be either a determinist if you view the brain as too big to be subject to quantum randomness, or have elements of randomness which is no more free than determinism. There would be no room for true freedom that religious people generally talk about.)
- We cannot prove that the laws of physics govern all of nature. (See David Hume on this point).
- Even assuming that the laws of physics govern all of nature, this does not get us determinism. For it is not evident that human choices are a *part *of nature – if, by “nature”, you mean the physical universe.