My apologies for any appearance of āloadingā (whatever you meant by that). I figured that 22 pages of āfunā was probably enough to relieve the implied frustration expressed in your title. I meant no deception in my question.
The very most common and mother of all logic errors comes in the initial premises (fathered by temptation to presume into error = sin). It is a trick of the Magi to quickly assert a plausible premise then follow-up with very sound and engaging logical argument. This has been used for thousands of years in all religions to thwart a logical adversary (Buddha vs Brahman).
When reviewing an argument for logical soundness, I seldom get past the premises, so in your OP, I didnāt get very far at all before those familiar alarms were going off.
In your OP, you state;
āā¦In that case there are two possible worlds, one, where the agent makes a moral choice (regardless of how moral is defined) and another one, where the agent makes an immoral choice. God can actualize either one of these worldsā¦.ā
The entire rest of your argument seems to depend entirely on the presumption that God can actualize any of many possible worlds. This is a false premise, to wit;
Do you believe that the quantities 2 plus 2 can equal anything but the quantity of 4? Could God have made it any different?
If you believe that God can be illogical, then there is a mountain of logic, rationale, and religious text that says otherwise. If necessary, I can provide quite a bit of that later.
If you accept that God actually must remain logical (and I assure you this is most certainly the case), then when God creates a universe, within that universe 2+2 must certainly equal 4, not 3, not 4.1, but exactly 100.00% 4 and nothing else ā ever.
Note that in true logic, there is always only one truly logical consequence brought by any true premise (this is what constitutes logic). Any real situation must bring about one and only one result. Man calculates probabilities only because he cannot know all things and thus must guess from many imagined possibilities, but God/Truth/Reality itself is not in that situation.
Cause and effect are the āElā of logic. āFirst Causeā (God) refers to the first true logical step, not the first event in time. The real first cause must bring about the one and only first logical effect and no other. All of Science depends on this fact of logic and reasoning.
In short, the actual world is the ONLY possible world.
The idea of āan infinite number of possible worldsā is a ruse to open a universe of imaginary stories for the mind (works great for Hollywood), but it is merely the voice of a magician creating confusion and illusion.
True logic is about what absolutely MUST be true (and btw, God is also defined as that which absolutely MUST be, as described in the Torah). This universe is truly logical despite many misperceptions by humanity. This universe is the one and only universe because logic dictates that it is what absolutely must be the effect of any logical train extending from any initial cause.
Thus;
If there is evil in THIS actual world, then true logic dictates that evil MUST exist and there was truly no possibility for any other option.
If freedom of will in THIS world has led to evil actions, then true logic dictates that there was absolutely no real other option.
The idea that any other universe is possible is the āFirst Cause of Fallacyā.