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Based only on the one paragraph where Dr. Craig states the thesis and not on any of the comments, I would say yes. Not only that but that is Catholic teaching as well.
I am not clear what Craig’s commitments are regarding time. He has written a great deal on the subject, including a dissertation, I think.Most Catholic philosophers do not believe in middle knowledge (Molinism), though I’m not sure if the Catholic Church is opposed to it (it was proposed by a Jesuit). In general - though my understanding is that the literature on it is complex, and I’m not familiar with it - I think it is based on a wrongful conception of God’s timelessness and causality. Middle knowledge requires that God knows what an agent (so far uncreated) would do in certain circumstances, and so can put them into those circumstances while they still act freely, just in a way that God anticipated.
I think Molinism faces other difficulties: since God is changeless and timeless (and Craig is committed to that), God does not have “foreknowledge” in the sense that He is at time t1 and “sees” every subsequent time. God is present fully to every time as the Creator of time. So this middle knowledge would have to have some metaphysical (though not temporal) priority to God’s creation. But then his middle knowledge is also dependent on creation because it’s dependent on what He creates. He only knows what you will do in situation X because He has created you and willed your existence from eternity. But if His willing you is dependent on His creating you to know how you act in X, then we seem to have an issue in grounding.
I don’t really see what it offers us over traditional accounts of omniscience, timelessness, free will, causality, etc. Those seem to work fine to me.
If the B-theorist of time is correct, then future events like A are just as real as present or past events. If God is timeless, then all events in time are equally real for Him and can be known by Him in the same way. There’s nothing about events future for us that makes them more difficult for God to know. Hence, there’s just no need for Him to deduce such events from present conditions. **Now I myself do not hold to a B-theory of time. I hold to a tensed or A-Theory of time according to which the future in no sense exists **(see my book Time and Eternity for discussion of these competing views). Neither do I think that God exists timelessly since the moment of creation, since I think divine timelessness stands or falls with your theory of time. So, as you note, I reject a perceptualist model of divine knowledge, according to which God “looks” and “sees” what is happening in the world (a terribly anthropomorphic conception of God’s knowledge in any case!). Rather I accept some sort of conceptualist model, according to which God’s knowledge is not acquired by any sort of perception but is more akin to innate knowledge. God just has the essential property of knowing only and all true propositions.
It is not always clear where Craig stands in terms of classical theism. Feser has some difficulty with his position and tends to view Craig as somewhat of a theistic personalist.Ah, then I stand corrected. I knew he (unlike some process theologians) held God to be unchanging, but I guess that doesn’t necessarily extend to timelessness.
Timelessness definitely is central to classical Catholic conceptions of God, so I’d take that to be another strike against Molinism… though Craig would of course disagree.
I have said a lot more about this subject in a number of posts, links to which interested readers can find collected here. **The question of where Craig’s own views fit is a tricky one. **On the one hand, the kalām cosmological argument, of which Craig is famously a champion, seems (as Geisler points out) clearly to entail that God is eternal or non-temporal. On the other hand, Craig suggests in his book The Kalām Cosmological Argument that “God is timeless prior to creation and in time subsequent to creation” (p. 152). (But as Geisler and House point out, this statement can be read in different ways, and while on one reading it is incompatible with classical theism, it is not necessarily incompatible with it on another reading.) Craig has also been critical of the doctrine of divine simplicity. I have responded to his criticisms…
Source: edwardfeser.blogspot.ca/2013/04/craig-on-theistic-personalism.html#more
It’s not a Church dogma, but the idea of Molinism (which includes scientia media, middle knowledge) was developed by a Catholic theologian.
I think it’s important to note, that although the said document is probably very interesting, is well worth a read, and quite probably right, the document is from a theological commission, and thus is not apart of the teaching authority of the Church. It is not an exercise of the magisterium of the Church.Since one of the topics addressed on that page is the salvation of infants I will refer you to a document from the Vatican that explains the Catholic position.
Good reading!
vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/cti_documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20070419_un-baptised-infants_en.html
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He has struck me as falling somewhere in the middle. He’s not a theistic personalist in the sense that Plantinga and Swinburne are, but in the end he probably tends in that direction. He does not accept divine simplicity, which is a pretty central tenet of classical theism.It is not always clear where Craig stands in terms of classical theism. Feser has some difficulty with his position and tends to view Craig as somewhat of a theistic personalist.
I suspect his wishy washiness stems from his theological commitments to the form of Protestantism he accepts which is incompatible with the philosophical or metaphysical conclusions that would take him directly into Catholicism were he to fully engage with them. In some ways, he looks askance at the more logically sound solutions because he foresees where these will take him, so he treads the path carefully so as not to “go there.”He has struck me as falling somewhere in the middle. He’s not a theistic personalist in the sense that Plantinga and Swinburne are, but in the end he probably tends in that direction. He does not accept divine simplicity, which is a pretty central tenet of classical theism.
I also find his reasons for rejecting it a bit wishy washy, though he’s written on it elsewhere too. It seems like what he has to say about metaphysically proper parts does not quite engage the debate over divine simplicity. He gives an example of performing an operation to remove someone’s kidney and concludes, “The best solution to this problem is to deny that there really is any object called Dottie* [ie. the person minus the kidney]. It’s just a figment of our imagination.”
But in an Aristotelian-Thomistic framework there are much better solutions than saying that the the difference is in our imagination, and it rather seems like support for a substance-accident ontology. Dottie* is not a separate object. She is substantially identical to Dottie. But the difference between them is real, though.
It’s also worth noting that “metaphysically proper parts” does not just refer to being materially divisible into bits and pieces. It refers to things which are compounds of essence and existence, form and matter, and so on.