If a nucleus decays then the nuclear decay is the mechanism for decay and there is no necssity for an antecedent cause. How is that different?
Belorg:
Well, that’s certainly mechanistic. But, the nucleus of an atom has no real choice. It can do nothing other than what it is limited to do by its Creator. But, a man can choose not from hundreds of potential choices, but perhaps from a potential infinity of choices.
One could argue that because there are only a finite number of exigencies in the universe, then we are limited by that and therefore not capable of exercising absolute freedom of will. If those are the parameters then that is so. And, the same could be said of an entity that is capable of learning. Its choices are limited by what it knows. But, a true
learning entity may continue to learn throughout its life. Then, when one considers the juxtapositioning of the myriad things that it knows, its choices can become more and more limitless with each passing day.
Humans have that potential propensity for such grace. Few if ever achieve complete knowledge of all things. But, that is a senseless argument. If one has but three choices: to do “a” or, to do “b”, he always has a third choice: to not act. Each and all of these may be grounded in a specific rationale as its ‘cause’. Or, each and all of these may be grounded in no specific rationale as its ‘cause’. The choice of one or the other, of the three, can be nothing more than choosing to choose.
What I’m saying is that either the immaterial enduring substance of person A is different form that of person B and therefore A makes different choices than B, or A and B’s immaterial enduring substances are the same, in which case if A makes a different choice than B that can only be based on pure random.
But aren’t you ignoring, with this logic, that one human being can do both: make a random choice, or make a studied choice? And, each of us has that capability.
The precise cause of A’s choosing a and B choosing b is what exactly?
It may be precise or imprecise. That’s the point.
I don’t know. Do you have a suggestion as to what causes choices if it’s not the difference between A and B?
I do. A simple one: A and B are carefully positioned to follow the same learning path. A is born one day earlier than B. So A gets to incur an additional 24 hour’s worth of information than B. Now, his choices may be due in some measure to that additional learning. Or, they may not. But, what can be said is that that additional 24 hours of learning will more than likely color the future decisions of A just as the lack of those 24 hours of learning will color the decisions of B. Of course, one can say, well, God is still the ultimate cause because He created each of them - on different days. But, that’s a stretch.
God bless,
jd