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st_felicity
Guest
I don’t agree with either of the two choices you presented. You offer a false dichotomy with qualifiers that are not accurate to what I believe is true and thus cannot vote. I’m not the only one to find error in the poll.I am asking: “which one matters?” Now, the funny part is that I described the dilemma in a crystal clear fashion in the poll part of the OP, and you immediately disregarded it.
Is free will more important than the freedom to act on that will? More important? It’s not really about being “important.” It’s really more like is it “more necessary.”
Yes, free will is the important part. If one is unable to carry out that will, it is not important. Since I have an issue with the “more important” part of your question, I obviously can’t choose this one. And secondly–it’s not “not important” to be able to act–it’s very important, but perhaps not as “necessary.”
No, only the freedom to act on one’s will is the important. An empty wish that cannot be carried out is not relevant. “only…important?” No, that’s not correct. “not relevant?” Not correct either. So you see–the poll is flawed IMO and cannot be answered unless I agree with your premises, which I do not.
I agree with you to this point. BUT…the conclusion you draw from that DOES NOT NECESSARILY FOLLOW, and I do not agree with that.Ok, let’s clarify. There are two contrasting “wills” present in a rape case, one is rapist’s “will” to perform the act, the other is the victim’s “will” to avoid it. By not interfering, God allows the rapist’s will to prevail,
Because God allows free will to be exercised, He does not interfere, or it would NOT BE FREE. Does that make sense? It’s not that He values one above another–both are valued (the freedom of the individual’s will, not the hateful exercise of the free will), and non-interference is the only way that either can be free.which means that God “values” the will of the rapist’s will higher.
That seems rather close minded, and why I said that your mind is already made up on the matter.There is no other conclusion.
God and man are not the same sort of entities. God is the Creator, and we are the created. God has NO “responsibility” for us except that which He deigns to provide in His Providence. Your view God appears to be like he’s some big powerful “sky daddy” --He’s God. Yes, He’s personal and deigns to have a relationship with us, but in our freedom, He allows us to choose it. And He allows us that whether we are a rapist, or the one raped.If there is a human agent present, who had the power to intefere and who does not interfere, he will be held responsible for his inaction. Just like driving by an accident scene and not providing assintance is considered criminal.
But again, you assume your premise to be true, and I do not agree that being able to act on the will is required for the will to be free. Prove your premise and you may get somewhere.It really should be obvious. What you ask for sounds like this: “I am saying that a triangle has exactly 3 sides, and you are demanding evidence for that”. But, what the heck. The “evidence” (if you want to call it that) is the woman’s inability to carry out her intention in the rape case. To say that her “free will” is not affected by her inability to carry out her intention is sheer nonsense. But I can do even better.
I believe this is a different question as to WHY there is evil in the world, and I think that Exodus is discussing that with you quite clearly.Let’s accept your opposing view, and let’s say that the “thought is what matters”, and the ability to carry out is not important. If this were the case, then God really could interfere in each and every case, without violating that “free will”, since there is no interference with the “will”, only the ability to carry out. This stance robs you of all “free-will-defense”. God would have no more excuse for his “non-interference” policy.
What is your thread about? Is it about will and action, or is it about why God allows evil?
And this is yet another question concerning justice and the knowing the purposes of God.This phrase is only used if there was a chance that the attempt could have been successful. If there is no possibility of success, what does it matter what the intents were? If there is an accident, which traps miners underground, then the intent to rescue them does matter, as long as there is a chance of success. If there is no chance of that, the intent does not matter any more.
Hey–Have you ever read through Job in the OT. God directly tells Job why He allows what He allows, and the gist of it is that you don’t see the big picture as God sees it, and the Glory of God is made manifest through the whole of time and creation. We are a little part of that great masterpiece–a single hair on the Great Master’s brush, and yet contributing to the beauty of the whole. We can’t see it yet, and yet, our part is important.