One final time: freedom of will does NOT logically lead to evil actions

  • Thread starter Thread starter Spock
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
But aren’t you saying that, of necessity, the world could possibly be one in which all moral agents choose good? But isn’t it instead possible that such a world could, of necessity, not be possible, and we have no way of knowing?
My friend, just give me some **reason **to take that seriously. As stated, it is an example of the fallacy called “argumentum ad ignoratiam”.

I give you a hint. Either show me that there is reason to believe that God can actualize W2 (from the post above - where the one agent, confronted by one moral dilemma WILL choose incorrectly) but unable to actualize W1 (where the one agent confronted by by same moral dilemma WILL to choose correctly). Or, alternatively give me a number, where the moral agents confronted by “n” moral dilemmas are all able to choose all of them correctly, but when confronted by “n + 1” dilemmas will not be able to choose all of them correctly. What is this “magic” number, which separates the “wheat” from the “chaff”? And of, course, why? That is all I ask. If you, or anyone can do that I will eat crow. 🙂
 
My friend, just give me some **reason **to take that seriously. As stated, it is an example of the fallacy called “argumentum ad ignoratiam”.

I give you a hint. Either show me that there is reason to believe that God can actualize W2 (from the post above - where the one agent, confronted by one moral dilemma WILL choose incorrectly) but unable to actualize W1 (where the one agent confronted by by same moral dilemma WILL to choose correctly). Or, alternatively give me a number, where the moral agents confronted by “n” moral dilemmas are all able to choose all of them correctly, but when confronted by “n + 1” dilemmas will not be able to choose all of them correctly. What is this “magic” number, which separates the “wheat” from the “chaff”? And of, course, why? That is all I ask. If you, or anyone can do that I will eat crow. 🙂
I’ve never met a person who tells the truth 100% of the time, who hasn’t covered their tracks at one time or another by representing the truth to be other than what it is, who never acts out of character or is always at peace with who they are no matter the company they’re in, who’s never ashamed-in others words who’s always true themselves while being true to others.The smallest lie is immoral for no other reason than it’s out of sync with the rest of the universe. The laws of physics don’t lie, lions and tigers don’t lie-they always act according to their natures.

I’ve met great people-much better than me-but our standards are still too low for what constitutes or defines moral perfection and to say “nobodies perfect” avoids the question IMHO.
 
I’ve never met a person who tells the truth 100% of the time, who hasn’t covered their tracks at one time or another by representing the truth to be other than what it is, who never acts out of character or is always at peace with who they are no matter the company they’re in, who’s never ashamed-in others words who’s always true themselves while being true to others.The smallest lie is immoral for no other reason than it’s out of sync with the rest of the universe. The laws of physics don’t lie, lions and tigers don’t lie-they always act according to their natures.

I’ve met great people-much better than me-but our standards are still too low for what constitutes or defines moral perfection and to say “nobodies perfect” avoids the question IMHO.
This another example of the popular induction. “I have never seen a black swan, therefore black swans do not exist” is the same fallacy. From the fact that you have not met such a person (or if you met, you did not realize it) it does not follow that the existence of such a person is logically impossible. By the way, don’t Catholics belive that Mary was such a person?
 
This another example of the popular induction. “I have never seen a black swan, therefore black swans do not exist” is the same fallacy. From the fact that you have not met such a person (or if you met, you did not realize it) it does not follow that the existence of such a person is logically impossible. By the way, don’t Catholics belive that Mary was such a person?
Yes, Catholics believe that Mary was granted a special blessing for Gods purpose of having her play a role in helping out the rest of mankind-an exception rather than the rule. It may well be that such a person is logically impossible if left to their own devices-that is, removed from any special help from their creator.
 
Yes, Catholics believe that Mary was granted a special blessing for Gods purpose of having her play a role in helping out the rest of mankind-an exception rather than the rule. It **may well be **that such a person is logically impossible if left to their own devices-that is, removed from any special help from their creator.
Unfortunately “may well be” does not count. Either there is a logical contradiction, or there is not. In mathematics (and logic) there is no such construct as “if A then B else C but maybe D”
 
Yes, Catholics believe that Mary was granted a special blessing for Gods purpose of having her play a role in helping out the rest of mankind-an exception rather than the rule. It may well be that such a person is logically impossible if left to their own devices-that is, removed from any special help from their creator.
A purely theological aside…

No, this takes away Mary’s unique nature. She had no special help from anyone. She freely chose goodness, and this is one major explanation for why there is such a long delay between the Creation and the Redemption. This kind of holiness was a necessary dwelling, if the Light of the world were to find its way in.
 
A purely theological aside…

No, this takes away Mary’s unique nature. She had no special help from anyone. She freely chose goodness, and this is one major explanation for why there is such a long delay between the Creation and the Redemption. This kind of holiness was a necessary dwelling, if the Light of the world were to find its way in.
But grace is divine help and doesn’t this get at the heart of the matter? That man needs God in order to be the being He intends and yet God wants us to freely choose/agree with His will-to accept that grace?
 
But grace is divine help and doesn’t this get at the heart of the matter? That man needs God in order to be the being He intends and yet God wants us to freely choose/agree with His will-to accept that grace?
Mary had no *special *help; she did have help. She was full of grace because she chose to accept grace. If another woman, 600 years earlier, had been so receptive to grace, I think the Messiah would have been born to her.
 
Mary had no *special *help; she did have help. She was full of grace because she chose to accept grace. If another woman, 600 years earlier, had been so receptive to grace, I think the Messiah would have been born to her.
The Immaculate Conception was definitely a special work of grace- but Mary still had to say “yes” to Gods’ will. In any case she would still not be the being she is if not for the grace of the Redemption. It seems to me that the difficulty is in grasping that somehow there’s room for God’s sovereignty and our freedom both-at least a freedom significant enough for us to be culpable for our actions.
 
Tdgesq & Spock,

You two have tremendous patience, and have educated me immensely.
Thank you! I confess that I very much appreciate the timing of your excellent summary because I am running out of time to respond to these posts. I have been out of town most of this week, and it looks like next week isn’t going to be much better. I enjoy the topic though, so I will post when I can. This response is as much to Spock as it is to you. He has been a very worthy opponent.
A quick external summary of where we seem to be at (correct me if I’m wrong):

B1: Spock says that there is a possible world in which no wrong decisions are made.
Yes, and I’m not sure if he means that it is necessarily true or only contingently true. If he’s saying that it is necessarily true, then I disagree.
B2: Tdgesq says something slightly different: it is a logically possible state of events that a world exists without wrongdoing.
This is mostly correct. I would have no problem with Spock’s formulation of B1 if it was understood as being contingently true on the free choice of all possible actors. There has to be some recognition of the possibility that all free possible actors will choose to do a morally wrong act, and I’m talking about before they are actualized. Sometimes Spock seems to affirm this, but other times not.
The difference between B1 and B2 is said to lie in the indeterminate factor of possible humans’ free decisions. The key question is:

C1: Is there a possible human that will freely do nothing wrong?
I agree that this is the question. But just like B1 & B2 above, the question is whether there is necessarily a possible human that will freely do nothing wrong. I do not know Spock’s answer to that. The correct answer is that it is not necessarily possible. It is contingently possible. It may be that every single possible person will freely commit an act that is morally wrong. It appears (to me at least) that Spock affirms this, but at other times it seems that he does not.
Tdgesq says the answer to C1 cannot be determined a priori. Spock has a mathematical proof to the effect that it can, and that there could, in effect, be an infinite number of such humans. The mathematical proof factors in indeterminacy, defined (so far as I can tell) as random 50/50 decision-making between right and wrong.
I have not begun to explore the mathematical explanation. That is because it was said to be unnecessary or “icing on the cake.” Prior to any mathematical proof Spock appears to argue that by logical necessity it is true that (in your parlance) some possible human freely chooses to do nothing wrong. If that is what he argues then he is mistaken because the proposition: “some possible human freely chooses to do nothing wrong” depends upon the free choice of the actor, which of course we cannot see in advance. That is why we call it a contingently true proposition. It is also why we would say that although this world is possible, its possibility is only contingently true.
This idea of indeterminacy is contested by Tdgesq, who says that these decisions are indeterminate only in the sense that we do not know what the result will be, not in the sense that the result is random.
You are right that I am not using the word “indeterminacy” in the same sense as mathematical indeterminacy. I defined that term early on in negative way – that neither God nor anything other than the person can predetermine that person’s decision to choose what is morally right or morally wrong. It is up to the person. And you are also correct that it is an indeterminate property in that we cannot know in advance what the possible free human’s decision will be. Only God would know that.
Essentially, Tdgesq is saying that these could only be known empirically (that is, by someone playing out every possible scenario and “watching”), but only God can know them empirically. Perhaps there are an infinite number of possible persons, none of which choose good consistently.
Ding, ding, ding! We have a winner! I might have some problems with the “infinite number” part, but otherwise this is exactly what I am saying. It may be that there are no possible humans who will do nothing wrong, or, as I have put it, it may be that all possible persons freely perform at least one morally wrong act. God would know this in advance, but it would still mean he could not actualize a world where all persons only do what is morally right.

Now if you believe the foregoing state of affairs is possible, regardless of whether Spock believes it or not, then you can see why the argument in the OP fails. There it is argued:
Result: No matter how many moral agents are in a world, and no matter how many decisions are made, there is at least one possible world where all the agents make only morally upright decisions - while retaining their free will. God can actualize this world since it contains no logical contradiction.
Spock argues that there is necessarily a possible world where all agents freely make only morally upright decisions. But as we have seen, this is only a contingently possible world. If we take seriously his admission that all possible persons may freely choose to commit at least one morally wrong act, then this world may not be possible at all. And if it is not possible, then God cannot actualize it.

Now we can argue about the probability that all possible persons freely choose to commit at least one morally wrong act. That’s fine. But I have I think (well, really Plantinga) shown that the conclusion in the OP that there is necessarily a possible world where all agents freely make only morally upright decisions – is false.
From my perspective, all that remains to be hashed out is your definitions of indeterminacy. Why should we believe one or the other definition?
Maybe, but even if “randomness” was the proxy for free will, it would still not save the conclusion in the OP; for even then it would not prove that there is necessarily a possible world where all agents freely make only morally upright decisions. Of course we could put a simple question to the non-theist: on what basis do you choose randomness as a proxy for free will? Although the answer to that question would be interesting, it does not bear one way or the other on the falsity of the conclusion in the OP.

It has been shown that it is a logically possible state of affairs that God is omnipotent, omniscient, eternally good, and that evil exists.
 
I would have no problem with Spock’s formulation of B1 if it was understood as being contingently true on the free choice of all possible actors. There has to be some recognition of the possibility that all free possible actors will choose to do a morally wrong act, and I’m talking about before they are actualized. Sometimes Spock seems to affirm this, but other times not.
Well, we have some great conversation, that is for sure. I will spell out in detail why it is necessarily true that there is at least one world, where all the agents will choose the morally right act, and - as a matter of fact - it is because they have the free will to choose otherwise.
I have not begun to explore the mathematical explanation. That is because it was said to be unnecessary or “icing on the cake.” Prior to any mathematical proof Spock appears to argue that by logical necessity it is true that (in your parlance) some possible human freely chooses to do nothing wrong. If that is what he argues then he is mistaken because the proposition: “some possible human freely chooses to do nothing wrong” depends upon the free choice of the actor, which of course we cannot see in advance. That is why we call it a contingently true proposition. It is also why we would say that although this world is possible, its possibility is only contingently true.
There is a misunderstanding here. I said that the inductive part is icing on the cake, but the previous part is also based on mathematical certainty.

Now let’s analyze that long neglected minimal scenario. Even better, there is an even more minimalistic setup, where there are either no moral agents, or there are no morally charged decisons to be made. In this case it is obvious that there cannot be morally incorrect decisions (no morally right decisions either), and thus God can instantiate this world - since it is not contingent on anything. Of course one may argue that such a state of affairs is trivial, and does not count. Whether trivial, or not, it is now mathematically proven that there is at least one world (state of affairs, if you will), where there is no evil, and which is available for God to actualize.

Now to the meat of the argument. One moral agent, one morally charged decison to be made. Your argument is that it is possible that the moral agent will choose incorrectly in every possible state of affairs. If that is the case, then - by definition - it is necessarily true that the agent must choose incorrectly - and thus he is deprived of his free will to choose otherwise. The definition of “necessarily true” proposition is that it is true in every possible states of affairs. In other words, he must have the possibility to choose correctly, if he is to have free will. Therefore, it follows from having the freedom to choose either rightly or wrongly, that both states of affairs are available for God to actualize. Now, if you so desire, we can move unto the inductive part, or you can bring up arguments why I am wrong in this scenario. Whenever you find time to respond, I will be here, patiently waiting. Have a wonderful day. 🙂
 
Now let’s analyze that long neglected minimal scenario. Even better, there is an even more minimalistic setup, where there are either no moral agents, or there are no morally charged decisons to be made. In this case it is obvious that there cannot be morally incorrect decisions (no morally right decisions either), and thus God can instantiate this world - since it is not contingent on anything.
I already agreed that this is a necessarily possible world here: forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5498360&postcount=104

God could with no restrictions create a world where: W2: (a) God does not create persons with free will; (b) God causally determines people in every situation to choose what is right; and (c) There is no evil in W2.
Whether trivial, or not, it is now mathematically proven that there is at least one world (state of affairs, if you will), where there is no evil, and which is available for God to actualize.
True, but I have already admitted that. God could certainly create a world where there is no evil by making human beings dummies (or robots) who are preprogrammed to do everything right. God has a morally sufficient reason for allowing evil. In the words of Plantinga:

God’s creation of persons with morally significant free will is something of tremendous value. God could not eliminate much of the evil and suffering in this world without thereby eliminating the greater good of having created persons with free will with whom he could have relationships and who are able to love one another and do good deeds.

This is certainly a subjective judgment, but it is one I think most people, theist or non-theist, would agree with. Besides, in the OP you made the claim that “I am going to show that it is possible to have a world, where there is free will and there are no evil choices.” It does nothing to advance your argument then if God strips us of free will to ensure that no evil choices are made.
One moral agent, one morally charged decison to be made. Your argument is that it is possible that the moral agent will choose incorrectly in every possible state of affairs. If that is the case, then - by definition - it is necessarily true that the agent must choose incorrectly - and thus he is deprived of his free will to choose otherwise.
You will have to put this in the form of a syllogism or some other logical notation because I see no way that your conclusion will follow from your premises. This is an invalid argument. Here is why:

(1) It is a possible that one moral agent will make a morally incorrect decision in every possible state of affairs.
(2) It is also a possible that one moral agent will make a morally correct decision in every possible state of affairs.
(3) Therefore, it is necessarily true that the agent must make a morally incorrect decision.

Conclusion (3) obviously does not follow when one inserts premise (2) – which, without more, is equally true - and thus makes it clear that there is the possibility (at least from our perspective) that the agent can do otherwise.
In other words, he must have the possibility to choose correctly, if he is to have free will.
I disagree. That may or may not surprise you, but it is the right answer if I understand you. You are claiming I think (once again) that the free agent must “necessarily choose correctly,” or else he doesn’t have free will. You use the word “possibility” in the sentence above, but I perceive you to really mean that “he could have chosen otherwise than he did.” And I categorically reject that proposition. All I care about is whether the locus of causal control resides with the agent. Under that definition of free will, the actor does have the possibility to choose correctly.
Therefore, it follows from having the freedom to choose either rightly or wrongly, that both states of affairs are available for God to actualize.
That is not correct. I won’t repeat the logical argument above for why it is wrong. I will simply refer you to our own discussion on the matter:
Do you recognize that some worlds are possible only if certain contingencies are met? And do you admit that it could be the case that all possible persons may freely choose to commit at least one morally bad act?
Sure, I agree.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=355228&page=7

You agree that all possible persons may freely choose to commit at least one morally bad act. Yet now you are claiming that if all possible persons, or even if one possible person, choose to commit at least one morally bad act then he didn’t freely choose at all. Either you were wrong when you agreed with my earlier statement, or you are wrong now. You will have to decide.
Now, if you so desire, we can move unto the inductive part, or you can bring up arguments why I am wrong in this scenario. Whenever you find time to respond, I will be here, patiently waiting. Have a wonderful day.
I did have a wonderful day! I went to the theatre and watched a movie with my two daughters. We had a great time. I am keenly interested in the mathematical induction argument you propose, but I think we have to settle the above first.
 
God could with no restrictions create a world where: W2: (a) God does not create persons with free will; (b) God causally determines people in every situation to choose what is right; and (c) There is no evil in W2.
Yes, we agreed on that, but what I said was slightly different. It is possible to have free agents, who never commit morally incorrect acts, because no morally significant situations ever arise. In this scenario we have no “robots” and we have no evil. But I accept that you can argue that this scenario is not relevant. What is the use of free will if there is no situation where is can be “exercised”?
In the words of Plantinga:

God’s creation of persons with morally significant free will is something of tremendous value. God could not eliminate much of the evil and suffering in this world without thereby eliminating the greater good of having created persons with free will with whom he could have relationships and who are able to love one another and do good deeds.
The words I have problems with are highlighted above. That is something that needs to substantiated, not just asserted. How would Plantinga know that God could eliminate **some **of the evil and suffering, but not much? Besides, if God could eliminate some of the evil without jeopardizing the “greater good” of free will, and does not do so, then God is already not “good”. To allow unnecessary evil and suffering is not compatible with “goodness”.

However, this is just a sidetrack. I am not going to exploit it in my reasoning.
This is certainly a subjective judgment, but it is one I think most people, theist or non-theist, would agree with.
Well, since you brought it it up, I, for one disagree with it. But my personal opinion does not count.
You will have to put this in the form of a syllogism or some other logical notation because I see no way that your conclusion will follow from your premises. This is an invalid argument. Here is why:

(1) It is possible that one moral agent will make a morally incorrect decision in every possible state of affairs.
(2) It is also a possible that one moral agent will make a morally correct decision in every possible state of affairs.
(3) Therefore, it is necessarily true that the agent must make a morally incorrect decision.

Conclusion (3) obviously does not follow when one inserts premise (2) – which, without more, is equally true - and thus makes it clear that there is the possibility (at least from our perspective) that the agent can do otherwise.
Whoa! (I always wanted to say that. :)) Your syllogism is not what I was saying. You said here forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5433544&postcount=37 :
W1: (a) 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 evil in W1.
W2: (a) God does not create persons with free will; (b) God causally determines people in every situation to choose what is right; and (c) There is no evil in W2.
W3: (a) God creates persons with free will; (b) God causally determines people in every situation to choose what is right; and (c) There is no evil in W3.
W4: (a) 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.
W1 is clearly possible. W2 is also possible. God could causally determine everything we do such that we always do right. W3 is not a possible world because God causally determining a person to choose what is right in every situation is logically inconsistent with free will. W4 is a possible world, although unlikely. It could happen that people exercise their free will to always do what is right without any causal determination by God.
… which is exactly what I am saying. However, later you said in this post: forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5459987&postcount=72 :
What you seem to be missing is that the property “always chooses what is right” cannot be determined by God. It is an indeterminate property that is contingent upon the free decision of the person. But since it is contingent in this way, it could be that no possible person always chooses what is right. God’s omniscience doesn’t make any difference in this circumstance because he foresees that all persons will perform at least one morally wrong action.
In other words, W4 is only possible if there are possible persons who always choose what is right. Since that is contingent upon their free decision, and since God cannot determine that decision without logical contradiction, under these circumstances W4 is impossible.
So what will it be? Possible or impossible? (Tertium non datur. :))

Let’s analyze this as pertaining to the one agent, one decision scenario: There is one agent. He makes one decison. Therefore there can be 2 possible states of affairs: S(M) - where the agent makes the morraly correct choice, and S(I) - where the agent makes the morally incorrect choice. Both of them are contingent upon the decision. Both of them can be foreseen by God. Can we rule out either one of these as logically impossible? Obviously not. If either one is ruled out as logically impossible, then the agent was “doomed” to make the “other” selection, and as such he has no free will. Therefore both scenarios are possible, and thus God can actualize either one of them - again, without “forcing” the decision. That is the proof for the presented scenario. Ready for the inductive part?
 
Let’s analyze this as pertaining to the one agent, one decision scenario: There is one agent. He makes one decison. Therefore there can be 2 possible states of affairs: S(M) - where the agent makes the morraly correct choice, and S(I) - where the agent makes the morally incorrect choice. Both of them are contingent upon the decision. Both of them can be foreseen by God. Can we rule out either one of these as logically impossible? Obviously not. If either one is ruled out as logically impossible, then the agent was “doomed” to make the “other” selection, and as such he has no free will. Therefore both scenarios are possible, and thus God can actualize either one of them - again, without “forcing” the decision. That is the proof for the presented scenario. Ready for the inductive part?
Bear with me if you will but isn’t this a bit like the case of a man living out his entire life always freely making the right choice and then the rest of us looking back and saying, “He had no free will - he couldn’t have chosen otherwise-because he *didn’t *choose otherwise”? Couldn’t God look ahead and know we’d all be “doomed” to freely choose wrong without His being the formal cause of those wrong choices?
 
Whoa! (I always wanted to say that. ) Your syllogism is not what I was saying.
Then what are you saying? Citing to my posts and stating that you believe I made a contradictory statement (which I didn’t) is not an answer. Let’s look at what you wrote again:
Your argument is that it is possible that the moral agent will choose incorrectly in every possible state of affairs. If that is the case, then - by definition - it is necessarily true that the agent must choose incorrectly - and thus he is deprived of his free will to choose otherwise.
I stated it is possible that the moral agent will freely choose incorrectly. You agreed with that proposition as I showed in my last post here: forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5499196&postcount=105

Then you state your conclusion: “If that is the case, then – by definition – it is necessarily true that the agent must choose incorrectly.” Why your conclusion would ever follow from the premises is a total mystery since you didn’t explain it. Be that as it may, to show the invalidity of that argument, I inserted premise (2) in my last post. Let me be more specific. I will use the exact same language you used above but instead affirm the possibility that the moral agent will freely choose correctly:

It is possible that the moral agent will choose correctly in every possible state of affairs. If that is the case, then – by definition – it is necessarily true that the agent must choose correctly – and thus he is deprived of his free will to choose otherwise. Under your analysis, since it is possibly true that the moral agent will choose incorrectly, then it is necessarily true that the agent must choose incorrectly. But wait, using the same analysis, since it is possibly true that the moral agent will choose correctly, then it is necessarily true that the agent must choose correctly. So we come to the contradictory conclusion that moral agent must necessarily choose incorrectly and also necessarily choose correctly. In other words, you are arguing that there is no such thing as free will. Now here is the weird thing.

You have affirmed throughout this thread that there is such a thing as free will. We’ve been using the phrase “freely chooses” and “all free persons” etc. You affirmed that it may be that all possible persons freely choose to perform at least one morally wrong act. Furthermore, the entire point of this thread was to show that God could create people who could freely choose to do only what is right!
You said here forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost…4&postcount=37 W4 is a possible world, although unlikely. It could happen that people exercise their free will to always do what is right without any causal determination by God.
I stand by that statement.
… which is exactly what I am saying.
No it isn’t. Now you are saying there is no such thing as free will, which totally undermines your argument that God could necessarily actualize a state of affairs where all persons freely choose to do what is right.
However, later you said in this post: forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost…7&postcount=72 :
In other words, W4 is only possible if there are possible persons who always choose what is right. Since that is contingent upon their free decision, and since God cannot determine that decision without logical contradiction, under these circumstances W4 is impossible.
So what will it be? Possible or impossible?
The difference between contingently possible and necessarily possible worlds again? Yes, W4 would not be possible if no possible persons choose what is right. I can’t answer your question because we don’t know whether it would be possible or impossible since it is up to the choices of the free actors. That is why we call it a contingently possible world. The same is true of W1.

We said in W1 that it is a possible state of affairs that God creates persons with free will who choose to do evil. Of course, this is all contingent upon the free choice of the persons. It could be that all possible persons always freely choose to do what is right. If that is what all those possible persons choose, then W1 would not be possible. Again, that is why we call it a contingently possible world.
Let’s analyze this as pertaining to the one agent, one decision scenario: There is one agent. He makes one decison. Therefore there can be 2 possible states of affairs: S(M) - where the agent makes the morraly correct choice, and S(I) - where the agent makes the morally incorrect choice. Both of them are contingent upon the decision. Both of them can be foreseen by God. Can we rule out either one of these as logically impossible?
No we can’t. We don’t know what decision the agent will make. That is why it is a contingently possible world. It is up to the agent.
Obviously not. If either one is ruled out as logically impossible, then the agent was “doomed” to make the “other” selection, and as such he has no free will.
Incorrect. If we knew in advance what the decision of the free actor would be, just like God does, we would know if any given state of affairs was necessarily possible or impossible. So let’s assume for a moment that all possible persons freely choose to commit at least one bad act. Let’s further assume that we, along with God, can see this in advance. It is now certain that there is no possible state of affairs (W4) where free actors will always do what is right. This is now a necessarily false proposition. W4 is no longer a possible world. But what are we to make of your contention that this would deprive the agent of free will?

Your definition of free will as “the ability to do otherwise” is known as the principle of alternate possibilities (PAP). Modern libertarian philosophy rejects PAP as the defining characteristic of free will. From reading St. Augustine’s On Free Will, Confessions, and Retractions I can tell you that he also questioned whether PAP is the measure of free will.

The locus of causal control is the correct measure of free will. If the agent is the cause of his own actions (agent causation) rather than outside forces, then he is free. It does not matter how many people see in advance what he in fact freely chooses. It is a tautology, and a trite one at that, to say that the choice that the actor made (makes) is the one that he made (makes). That tells me nothing about the cause of the choice, which is something that libertarians and determinists alike require.

Once again, it is shown to be a logically possible state of affairs that God is omnipotent, omniscient, all good, and that evil exists.
 
Your definition of free will as “the ability to do otherwise” is known as the principle of alternate possibilities (PAP). Modern libertarian philosophy rejects PAP as the defining characteristic of free will. From reading St. Augustine’s On Free Will, Confessions, and Retractions I can tell you that he also questioned whether PAP is the measure of free will.
Just because some philosophers accept or reject something it is not relevant. **What **is being said is important, **who **says it, is not. I went and re-read this subject at plato.stanford.edu/entries/freewill/, just for the fun of it and to refresh my memory. First, the actual existence of free will is something that cannot be confirmed or disproven. It is a fundamental assumption. One either accepts it, or denies it. We assume in this conversation that free will exists. We may differ on the importance of it, but that is not a problem. Just “what” is free will, is the point of difference.
The locus of causal control is the correct measure of free will. If the agent is the cause of his own actions (agent causation) rather than outside forces, then he is free. It does not matter how many people see in advance what he in fact freely chooses. It is a tautology, and a trite one at that, to say that the choice that the actor made (makes) is the one that he made (makes). That tells me nothing about the cause of the choice, which is something that libertarians and determinists alike require.
This is what mathematicians call a “necessary but not sufficient” definition. What you say is true, and trivial, almost to the point of being meaningless. As long as there is no total brain control, the locus of decision always lies with the agent.

If we would stop here, and disregard everything else, some very strange propositions would occur. For example, someone argued before that when a woman is being raped, her free will is not violated, she can “will” not to be raped, and the fact that she is unable to carry out her “will” is of no consequence. Her “free will” is not impaired, even though she is physically unable act? Another example would be when someone’s family is held hostage and he is demanded to perform some illegal act. He is physically able to refuse, though psychologically he is not. Is his “free will” still intact?

No one with a sound mind can disagree that in these cases the victim’s free will is rendered invalid. Now you add another scenario, and say, that even if there is no hypothetical possibility to act otherwise, the person still has free will. Sorry, my friend, that is unacceptable. If we cannot to come to an agreement on this point, you will stick to your guns and assert that “free will” and evil are compatible, while I will say the opposite. We shall just have to agree to disagree.

One more observation: since we mutually agreed that your W4 world is contingently possible, that flatly contradicts that there is necessarily one person who has free will and will always perform at least one immoral act.

And finally, if you agree that there is at least one person (maybe more) who will freely (in my meaning) always act morally, and God can foresee that (omnisicence), then God can create a state of affairs without evil. The “trick” is that God can foresee all the possible states of affairs, can see that some other person would act immorally freely in at least one specific instance, then God can simply refuse to create this second person. After all there is no logical necessity that every possible person should be created (or actualized, or instantiated). This is not a trivial world, there are moral decisons in it, yet, no evil. Moreover, this a **constructive **proof (in the mathematical sense) not just an **existential **proof (also mathematically speaking). And that concludes the full refutation of the free will defense.
 
One more observation: since we mutually agreed that your W4 world is contingently possible, that flatly contradicts that there is necessarily one person who has free will and will always perform at least one immoral act.
This contingency is not based on the will of God, but on the wills of (possible) men and women with free will.
And finally, if you agree that there is at least one person (maybe more) who will freely (in my meaning) always act morally, and God can foresee that (omnisicence), then God can create a state of affairs without evil. The “trick” is that God can foresee all the possible states of affairs, can see that some other person would act immorally freely in at least one specific instance, then God can simply refuse to create this second person.
Golly, wouldn’t Mary get lonely? 🤷
 
This contingency is not based on the will of God, but on the wills of (possible) men and women with free will.
It does not matter. If it is theoretically **possible **that there can be a world without evil, then it is simply not true that there is necessarily (unavoidably) one person who will always commit at least one immoral act.
Golly, wouldn’t Mary get lonely? 🤷
No. God could just grab another handful of dirt… couldn’t he?
 
It does not matter. If it is theoretically **possible **that there can be a world without evil, then it is simply not true that there is necessarily (unavoidably) one person who will always commit at least one immoral act.
But isn’t the point Tdgesq is making about knowledge, not possibility? We do not *know *that there is a theoretically possible world (w/free will) without evil, because this proposition can only be verified by empirical considerations – the actual free decisions of agents.

We do know that, *if *such a contingency is met, W4 is logically possible. We do not know that such a contingency can possibly be met.

Suppose, however, there is one person who will do good, in the one-person, one-decision scenario. What sort of world is this? If such a situation is possible (which, arguably, Catholic dogma might imply), then freedom of will does not logically lead to evil actions. But neither does it lead to a satisfactory world. Anyone who enjoys his existence (even his sinful existence) would not prefer nonexistence to existence. So I think this, if it is allowed, is a hollow conclusion.
No. God could just grab another handful of dirt… couldn’t he?
But if free will decisions cannot be known, nor estimated, a priori, then we do not *know *that there is a second person that could exist that would make such a decision. It is an empirical exercise, not a rational one.
 
But isn’t the point Tdgesq is making about knowledge, not possibility? We do not *know *that there is a theoretically possible world (w/free will) without evil, because this proposition can only be verified by empirical considerations – the actual free decisions of agents.

We do know that, *if *such a contingency is met, W4 is logically possible. We do not know that such a contingency can possibly be met.
Yes, we can and we do. I am sorry, but math is impossible to avoid. There are mathematical theorems, which show the existence of a specific number, and unable to p(name removed by moderator)oint just what that number might be.

Let’s take a very simple example. You know the game tic-tac-toe. The original game withe 3*3 grid, where the aim is to place 3 “x”-s or 3 “o”-s onto the squares between the grid lines, and try to put then onto one row, or column of diagonal (the outcome, when both players play the best strategy is always a draw). If we generalize the game and play it on an “infinite” (or sufficiently large) board, the result is that the starting player always wins. If we play it with 4 “x”-s, and 4 “o”-s, the starting player also always wins (when playing the best strategy). When the game is to put 9 “x”-s and 9 “o”-s onto the board, the game is always a draw. For 5, 6, 7 or 8 pieces we don’t know, if the starting player wins, or the game results in a draw. Yet, we know that somewhere between 4 and 9, there is a divinding line. Under that line the starting player wins, above that line it is draw.

Even without having the precise number, we know, with absolute certainty, that such a dividing line exists. (This is called an “existential” proof, as opposed to a “constructive” proof, where not only the existence of something can be proven but also its exact value. The constructive proofs are more elegant and held in higher esteem, but sometimes we have to be content with an existential one.)

The same kind of problem we are contemplating here. We do not know what the actual agents will do. We do not have to know it. As long as free will means to have at least two available options, and it is the agent who makes the decision, it is mathematically certain that for any “n” (the overall number of morally singificant decisions) and for any “k” (the number of immoral outcomes) where “k” goes from “0” to “n” we can find a possible world where exactly “k” immoral (and thus “n - k” moral) decisons will be made.

Yes, the actual outcome one specific “experiment” is unknown (for us, but not unknown for God) until the decisions are actually made. But we know that one of the outcomes must be true. There will be either 0, or 1, or 2, or 3, or… “n” immoral decisions. Now can we rule out any one these outcomes? For example can we ascertain that exactly “103” immoral decisons are possible, but “104” immoral decisons are not? (I just made up these numbers.) On what ground? All those numbers are identical.
Suppose, however, there is one person who will do good, in the one-person, one-decision scenario. What sort of world is this? If such a situation is possible (which, arguably, Catholic dogma might imply), then freedom of will does not logically lead to evil actions. But neither does it lead to a satisfactory world. Anyone who enjoys his existence (even his sinful existence) would not prefer nonexistence to existence. So I think this, if it is allowed, is a hollow conclusion.
Well, we are getting somewhere. First, I said nothing about whether the world is “satisfactory”, or not. It is simple, that is true. Second, what constitues a “satisfactory” world is highly subjective. However, this is where the inductive part will come to the rescue. If we ever get there :). From this starting point it can be proven that for any “n” (the number of morally significant decisions) there is at least one posible world where k = 0 (that is no immoral outcomes will occur).

Let me tell you a nifty old story.

Jack and Mike are having a conversation. Jack tell Mike the following setup: “there is a gas-stove, an empty pot, a water faucet and a box of matches”. The problem is to have hot water, and asks Mike to set up the algorithm to make hot water. (I played this little game many times, and the result was always the same). Mike will answer (very hesitantly, since he suspects that the question is tricky): “well, I will place the pot under the faucet, open up the faucet, fill up the pot. Then I will place the filled pot onto the stove, strike a match, light up the gas, and wait for the water to become hot”. Jack says: “excellent algorithm!”. Now what would you do, if the pot would already be filled? The answer always comes up with full confidence this time: "I would place the pot on the stove, strike the match, light up the gas, and wait for the hot water. (And he usually smiles knowing that he gave a correct answer.)

Now Jack says: “well, this is how a physicist would act”. The mathematician says: “I would pour out the water, and thus reduce it to the previous, already solved problem”. I hope you see the point (and maybe had a chuckle). The point is that we do not have to examine each and every scenario. If we find a general solution (without specifying the “n” and “k”, then for any “n” and "any “k” we shall know that the problem is solved.
But if free will decisions cannot be known, nor estimated, a priori, then we do not *know *that there is a second person that could exist that would make such a decision. It is an empirical exercise, not a rational one.
No, that is not correct. We are conducting a thought-experiment. The only consideration is that a possible world cannot contain or lead to a logical contradiction.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top