T
tdgesq
Guest
. . . continued
You aren’t using the language of W4 when you say that God could “actualize” that world. If God “actualizes” a world, then he “actualizes” the people in that world as well. So one suspects you mean that God out of all the possible persons to actualize could determine in advance that he is going to actualize only those persons who do what is right. But then you are back to world W3. Now God has determined in advance that he is going to “actualize” only those persons who do what is right. That contradicts free will, as previously demonstrated.
It is also interesting that you haven’t ever denied that you were arguing W3. Perhaps because it is because of statements like these:
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5423905&postcount=1
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5425485&postcount=7
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5425890&postcount=12
No, God could not have chosen to actualize a world where everyone freely makes only the right decisions. That involves a contradiction. It appears you have been arguing W3. Even if you are now arguing W4, the debate is still over, because nobody is going to argue with you about W4. By the way, even in W4 it could be the case that all possible persons freely choose to commit at least one wrong act.
Spock, your arguments are Mackie’s arguments. The problem you have is that Mackie was refuted by Plantinga’s free will defense many years ago, and Mackie admits it:
J. L. Mackie one of the most prominent atheist philosophers of the mid-twentieth-century and a key exponent of the logical problem of evil has this to say about Plantinga’s Free Will Defense:
Since this defense is formally [that is, logically] possible, and its principle involves no real abandonment of our ordinary view of the opposition between good and evil, we can concede that the problem of evil does not, after all, show that the central doctrines of theism are logically inconsistent with one another. But whether this offers a real solution of the problem is another question. (Mackie 1982, p. 154)
Mackie admits that Plantinga’s defense shows how God and evil can co-exist, that is, it shows that “the central doctrines of theism” are logically consistent after all.
iep.utm.edu/e/evil-log.htm#H8
Unless you have something new to add to Mackie’s arguments, you aren’t going to get anywhere with W3 or make any headway with W4 that theists don’t already agree with.
No, it isn’t a rigorous definition, but in order to successfully rebut your positive assertion the theist is not required to give such a definition. It is simply a diversion from the topic. As long as we know that God cannot engage in logical inconsistency that is all that is necessary.The definition you offered: “God has enormous creative power, that he created the universe, that his thoughts are incomparably above ours”… is not a rigorous definition, it simply says that God is very powerful, which is hardly a substitute for a properly formatted definition.
If W4 is what you are arguing, then the theist agrees. It is a logically possible world that God creates persons with free will; (b) God does not causally determine people in every situation to choose what is right; and (c) There is no evil in W4. But if this is what you hold to, then who are you arguing against? Theists by and large don’t have a problem with W4 at all. Who is it that you sought to engage if this is what you meant all along? Somehow, one thinks that you were not and still are not arguing W4.It certainly is. In W4 there are free agents, who just “happen” to choose correctly each and every time. Could God “actualize” that world? I say he could. You may agree or disagree. Which one will it be? If you say, he cannot, point out the contradiction.
You aren’t using the language of W4 when you say that God could “actualize” that world. If God “actualizes” a world, then he “actualizes” the people in that world as well. So one suspects you mean that God out of all the possible persons to actualize could determine in advance that he is going to actualize only those persons who do what is right. But then you are back to world W3. Now God has determined in advance that he is going to “actualize” only those persons who do what is right. That contradicts free will, as previously demonstrated.
It is also interesting that you haven’t ever denied that you were arguing W3. Perhaps because it is because of statements like these:
(Emphasis added).If God wanted to, he could have actualized this world. Ours is not that world. Why God chose not to actualize that world is none of my concern. But the fact is that he did not, even though he could have done it.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5423905&postcount=1
(Emphasis added).But by choosing any one of the possible scenarios and actualizing any one of them, God decides up front, who will make moral and immoral decisons. And that is strong predestination.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5425485&postcount=7
(Emphasis added).He could have chosen the one where everyone freely makes only the right decisons (many of them), or the one where everyone freely makes only the wrong decisons (also many of them), or anything in-between. All the worlds are logically and physically possible.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5425890&postcount=12
No, God could not have chosen to actualize a world where everyone freely makes only the right decisions. That involves a contradiction. It appears you have been arguing W3. Even if you are now arguing W4, the debate is still over, because nobody is going to argue with you about W4. By the way, even in W4 it could be the case that all possible persons freely choose to commit at least one wrong act.
Spock, your arguments are Mackie’s arguments. The problem you have is that Mackie was refuted by Plantinga’s free will defense many years ago, and Mackie admits it:
J. L. Mackie one of the most prominent atheist philosophers of the mid-twentieth-century and a key exponent of the logical problem of evil has this to say about Plantinga’s Free Will Defense:
Since this defense is formally [that is, logically] possible, and its principle involves no real abandonment of our ordinary view of the opposition between good and evil, we can concede that the problem of evil does not, after all, show that the central doctrines of theism are logically inconsistent with one another. But whether this offers a real solution of the problem is another question. (Mackie 1982, p. 154)
Mackie admits that Plantinga’s defense shows how God and evil can co-exist, that is, it shows that “the central doctrines of theism” are logically consistent after all.
iep.utm.edu/e/evil-log.htm#H8
Unless you have something new to add to Mackie’s arguments, you aren’t going to get anywhere with W3 or make any headway with W4 that theists don’t already agree with.