Connection between free will and a known future?

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The problem arises when an agent with free has access to foreknowledge since it could do opposite of what is known and put foreknowledge on jeopardy. In another word, the truness of foreknowledge is subject to secrecy.
I just watched the movie Minority Report the other day. Check it out if you have not seen it. It support the idea that the trueness of foreknowledge is subject to secrecy and that knowing the future presents a new choice. This movie presents the future as possibilities.

Check out the movie Time Crimes also. That is another good movie about time traveling. This movie presents the future as set.

Both are entertaining.
 
The problem arises when an agent with free has access to foreknowledge since it could do opposite of what is known and put foreknowledge on jeopardy. In another word, the truness of foreknowledge is subject to secrecy.
Job tried. Was forced to comply though.
 
I don’t see why though, that I should completely rule out the possibility that even if a person is given knowledge of the future and he doubts that he will do that thing, that when the time comes he does choose to do that thing because perhaps the circumstances become known to him.
It’s not that you should rule out that possibility, it’s that if you allow for the possibility that a person who is told what he will do, will decide to do the oppsite that you run into this problem. And there is no reason to assume it’s not possible. It seems this is entailed by libertarian free will.
The problem is very simple, I agree, and so is the conclusion. It does seem simple to then decide that there must be no free will but I can’t help thinking that the whole idea of it is based around the assumption that the person would at some point want to change his future. I think that if the person really didn’t want to do a particular action(and didn’t) then that wouldn’t be the future that God knows. But I do understand the difficulty that the problem presents for someone trying to believe in God, as the Catholic Church describes him.
The problem is that if a person wants to do the opposite of what an omniscient entity foretells him, it is impossible to know the future.
The reason why it wouldn’t be “the future that God knows” is because the person has libertarian free will and that means that up to the choice, the future is open.
 
It’s not that you should rule out that possibility, it’s that if you allow for the possibility that a person who is told what he will do, will decide to do the oppsite that you run into this problem. And there is no reason to assume it’s not possible. It seems this is entailed by libertarian free will.

The problem is that if a person wants to do the opposite of what an omniscient entity foretells him, it is impossible to know the future.
The reason why it wouldn’t be “the future that God knows” is because the person has libertarian free will and that means that up to the choice, the future is open.
It is possible to choose differently; its just that a giant fish will swallow you for three days and bring you back to where you were supposed to be.
 
I just watched the movie Minority Report the other day. Check it out if you have not seen it. It support the idea that the trueness of foreknowledge is subject to secrecy and that knowing the future presents a new choice. This movie presents the future as possibilities.
That knowing the future presents a choice does not help your case.
The point is that if somebody knows the future and is able to communicate it, there is no lberatrian free will.
 
It’s not that you should rule out that possibility, it’s that if you allow for the possibility that a person who is told what he will do, will decide to do the oppsite that you run into this problem. And there is no reason to assume it’s not possible. It seems this is entailed by libertarian free will.

The problem is that if a person wants to do the opposite of what an omniscient entity foretells him, it is impossible to know the future.
The reason why it wouldn’t be “the future that God knows” is because the person has libertarian free will and that means that up to the choice, the future is open.
It would seem that God would foreknow all the repercussions of revealing the open choices and determined ones that the free agent would have access to, so then the information God would reveal to the agent would already account for the agent “doing the opposite” of what was revealed. Omniscience would not, in principle, allow a human agent to do the opposite because God would know and account for that. No “fooling” omniscience would even be theoretically possible.
 
It would seem that God would foreknow all the repercussions of revealing the open choices and determined ones that the free agent would have access to, so then the information God would reveal to the agent would already account for the agent “doing the opposite” of what was revealed. Omniscience would not, in principle, allow a human agent to do the opposite because God would know and account for that. No “fooling” omniscience would even be theoretically possible.
Let me assure you, Peter, that, were God to tell me that I would have coffee tomorrow, I would drink tea, just to show Him wrong. Now, what exacftly is God going to reveal to me then? That I will drink tea? Well, then I will drink coffee. The point is: there is no way for God or anyone else to know what choice I will make. There is no ‘accounting for that’.
 
Let me assure you, Peter, that, were God to tell me that I would have coffee tomorrow, I would drink tea, just to show Him wrong. Now, what exacftly is God going to reveal to me then? That I will drink tea? Well, then I will drink coffee. The point is: there is no way for God or anyone else to know what choice I will make. There is no ‘accounting for that’.
You suppose.
 
We do have an example
34 Jesus said to him, “Amen, I say to you, this very night before the cock crows, you will deny me three times.”
35 Peter said to him, “Even though I should have to die with you, I will not deny you.” And all the disciples spoke likewise.
Peter did what was foretold. He didn’t “want” that outcome but it was the one that happened.
 
Let me assure you, Peter, that, were God to tell me that I would have coffee tomorrow, I would drink tea, just to show Him wrong. Now, what exacftly is God going to reveal to me then? That I will drink tea? Well, then I will drink coffee. The point is: there is no way for God or anyone else to know what choice I will make. There is no ‘accounting for that’.
Does the “anyone else” include you? At which point in advance of acting on the choice would YOU “know” that choice? Is there a point of no return? Do you often act other than your choice just to prove yourself wrong, or to “deke” God out by pretending you are going to choose one option, but, instead, go for the other? How soon before committing to the “deke” do you feign the choice? And how, precisely, would you feign the choice and go for the deke without a choice to feign the choice?

Would the fact that you are aware of your choice before acting on it, likewise make the act unfree because you know the outcome prior to it transpiring?

Living in your head must be an adventure, since you don’t even believe there is a God but are quite prepared to play this game of “catch me if you can” on the off chance he does.

Of course, living in my head is no rose garden either, but I know a bogey god does not exist there from whom I must cleverly evade his noticing my choices.
 
Does the “anyone else” include you? At which point in advance of acting on the choice would YOU “know” that choice? Is there a point of no return? Do you often act other than your choice just to prove yourself wrong, or to “deke” God out by pretending you are going to choose one option, but, instead, go for the other? How soon before committing to the “deke” do you feign the choice? And how, precisely, would you feign the choice and go for the deke without a choice to feign the choice?

Would the fact that you are aware of your choice before acting on it, likewise make the act unfree because you know the outcome prior to it transpiring?

Living in your head must be an adventure, since you don’t even believe there is a God but are quite prepared to play this game of “catch me if you can” on the off chance he does.

Of course, living in my head is no rose garden either, but I know a bogey god does not exist there from whom I must cleverly evade his noticing my choices.
It’s a moot point. You are going to do what god tells you is your future. We have Peter and Judas as examples. Jesus predicted their behavior and they followed through as predicted. Peter even said that he would take the opposite action. He was powerless against his fate. Jesus even told Judas it would have been better if he wasn’t born. Powerless against he fate.
 
Let me assure you, Peter, that, were God to tell me that I would have coffee tomorrow, I would drink tea, just to show Him wrong. Now, what exacftly is God going to reveal to me then? That I will drink tea? Well, then I will drink coffee. The point is: there is no way for God or anyone else to know what choice I will make. There is no ‘accounting for that’.
The thing is that God foresees what you will choose tomorrow. If he tells you, you are going to choose to drink tea, it’s the future he sees after he told you. You may not be able to fathom why and might vow you will not do it but the future God sees is the *real *one. You will *choose *to drink tea. God doesn’t lie. That’s just how I feel about it. Omniscience and free will are compatible.
 
It’s a moot point. You are going to do what god tells you is your future. We have Peter and Judas as examples. Jesus predicted their behavior and they followed through as predicted. Peter even said that he would take the opposite action. He was powerless against his fate. Jesus even told Judas it would have been better if he wasn’t born. Powerless against he fate.
That is a non sequitur.

It isn’t that God’s knowledge made them powerless to choose otherwise, God’s knowledge merely “acknowledges” the choices that Peter and Judas freely made. The knowledge of anyone does not rescind free will as if one person merely having knowledge is sufficient to override another person’s free choice.

Where is the causal association being shown here and not merely assumed?
 
We do have an example

Peter did what was foretold. He didn’t "want" that outcome but it was the one that happened.
I recall, on another thread, you arguing that every act arises out of a want on the part of the agent, even God. Yet here you are arguing that need not be the case. Interesting.
 
That is a non sequitur.

It isn’t that God’s knowledge made them powerless to choose otherwise, God’s knowledge merely “acknowledges” the choices that Peter and Judas freely made. The knowledge of anyone does not rescind free will as if one person merely having knowledge is sufficient to override another person’s free choice.

Where is the causal association being shown here and not merely assumed?
Jesus tells Peter what he will do. Peter Denys that is what he’ll do, even says he’ll die before he lets it happen. He does what was foretold.

He has prior knowledge and assumed free will to choose another path but he doesn’t he is swept up in his destiny. It wasn’t his will or his choice that prevailed. God’s will was done not Peter’s.
 
Jesus tells Peter what he will do. Peter Denys that is what he’ll do, even says he’ll die before he lets it happen. He does what was foretold.

He has prior knowledge and assumed free will to choose another path but he doesn’t he is swept up in his destiny. It wasn’t his will or his choice that prevailed. God’s will was done not Peter’s.
Whoa! You’d better take this up with yourself, then because…
I still don’t see any difference. You are describing self control, which is also another desire manifested. I want ice cream. I know ice cream is bad so I refrain. I desire something other than what my ice cream can offer. I have swapped one desire for another, namely the desire for good health out weighs my desire for ice cream. You haven’t circumvented "want."
Your argument was that humans (and God, in fact) always do what we want, ultimately, and you used that as an argument why even God was not free but compelled to do what his “wants” dictate.

Now you are arguing that Peter didn’t choose nor do what he ultimately “wanted” but was compelled by God to do what he did.

Any agent with a will, according to your first post, must act in accordance with their “wants,” but in your second post, Peter (an agent with a will) acted, not according to his own wants, but because he was compelled against his wants.

Can you explain how these two contradictory positions can both be true? Obviously, one is not. Which of the two do you “want” to concede, or are you merely making statements simply to be contrary on both threads?
 
Does the “anyone else” include you? At which point in advance of acting on the choice would YOU “know” that choice? Is there a point of no return? Do you often act other than your choice just to prove yourself wrong, or to “deke” God out by pretending you are going to choose one option, but, instead, go for the other? How soon before committing to the “deke” do you feign the choice? And how, precisely, would you feign the choice and go for the deke without a choice to feign the choice?
I think there really is a point of no return just before the actual action.
As for “deking” God out, to do this i don’t have to pretend anything. if He tells me X , I’ll do Y, if I have free will. If that’s possible, and it should be possible if I truly have free will, then omniscience is an illusion. If it’s not possible, I have no libertarian free will.
The only way out for you is by claiming that it is impossible for God to foretell the future,
Would the fact that you are aware of your choice before acting on it, likewise make the act unfree because you know the outcome prior to it transpiring?
No
Living in your head must be an adventure, since you don’t even believe there is a God but are quite prepared to play this game of “catch me if you can” on the off chance he does.
That’s called a thought experiment, Peter.
Of course, living in my head is no rose garden either, but I know a bogey god does not exist there from whom I must cleverly evade his noticing my choices.
I believe your head is a rose garden, Peter. One in which your wish that God exists is so strong that it ignores all contradictions.
 
If God knows that revealing X will lead to ~X (as the skeptic must assume for the sake of argument), then on any traditional account of omnipotence, God cannot and would not reveal X.

On the other hand, if God knows that revealing X will not lead to ~X, then God can reveal X (ie. when he revealed that Peter would deny him three times).

That is one interpretation. The situation on the whole looks vacuous, and requires instantiating God in a particular instance of time in a way that seems inconsistent with God’s nature. To put it differently, the experimental setup is impossible.

That said, humans are naturally free. That does not mean humans are always free to do whatever; circumstantial limitations are consistent with a free nature. Catholics believe, for instance, that once we experience the beatific vision in heaven, we have no freedom to turn from God and sin. The angels, who accepted or rejected God with full knowledge, did so freely and eternally in a single act. It doesn’t seem obvious to me that the creature would be allowed to tempt his Lord.
 
Whoa! You’d better take this up with yourself, then because…

Your argument was that humans (and God, in fact) always do what we want, ultimately, and you used that as an argument why even God was not free but compelled to do what his “wants” dictate.

Now you are arguing that Peter didn’t choose nor do what he ultimately “wanted” but was compelled by God to do what he did.

Any agent with a will, according to your first post, must act in accordance with their “wants,” but in your second post, Peter (an agent with a will) acted, not according to his own wants, but because he was compelled against his wants.

Can you explain how these two contradictory positions can both be true? Obviously, one is not. Which of the two do you “want” to concede, or are you merely making statements simply to be contrary on both threads?
God’s want was larger and backed by the power to make it manifest. Peter still wanted. God still wanted.

My daughter wants ice cream for dinner, I want her to have a healthy meal. Guess what’s on the plate?
 
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