Hmm.
I don’ t think that the presence of absence of God in the universe changes much.
If we live in a purely mechanical, predictable world that was set in motion by the big bang, then it’s true, we’d have no free will. Everything will follow a predefined course, if you wound it back, everything would follow the same path. This idea makes me rather ill; I hate it to the core.
The other side is that there is a degree of randomness to the world. If I understand quantum mechanics correctly, which I probably don’t, there are things that seem to happen randomnly. As Hawkings quote goes, “Not only does God play dice, sometimes he cheats.” If things at the quantum level are random at all, then we still don’t have free will. We have the appearance of choice, but it is a series of random event posing as being deterministic.
On the other hand, if you have a God that set everything in motion according to a plan, then can anything truly diverge from that plan. In the Bible it says that people have free will, but then again God is all powerful and all knowing. Is it really possible to choose something that will ruin God’s plans? Jesus says that one of his followers was destined to fall. (Don’t ask me the verse, it’s when he’s praying in the garden in one of the gospels) Could Judas have really thwarted the plan of God and not betrayed Jesus? I mean really, God chose my brain chemistry, he chose my parents, he chose what sperm would run the distance, he chose the egg, he chose what would happen in my home town, what kind of up bringing I would have. Sure people may have had free will, but they were constrained by what they had the potential to do. So how free were they?
So it doesn’t really look like people have a lot of choice wether they believe in God or not.
My take is that we live in a world where there is a combination of factors. Social, biological, and physical factors keep me from thinking or doing certain things, but the factors are so complex, and are so likely to act in ways of creating feedback, that my brain organizes them somewhat autonomously.
Wow, for a guy who isn’t entirely sure what he’s talking about, I sure use a lot of words.
Did I come any closer to being on the same wave-length that time?