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iNs1d3tRiP
Guest
I’ve recently been studying Karl Rahner’s Spirit in the World. In light of this it has struck up several great conversations regarding epistemology. One of the most intriguing conversations I’ve been entangled in is about God’s knowledge of your choices.
Basically there are two positions and they go as follows:
The first asserts that God knows everything, definitively, even that of the future. The argument goes like this.
God is all-knowing.
knowledge of the future includes everything.
Therefore God knows the future.
However, the second argument is developed in direct opposition to this argument. It goes as follows.
The future is not yet.
What is not yet, does not exist.
Therefore, what does not exist cannot be known.
Of course this position holds that the future cannot be known definitively. It appears that we can definitely make very very good estimations, or even guesses if you are skeptic, as probability is really just the mathematics behind potentiality and actuality. Also notice, this view does not question God’s Omniscience because it doesn’t say there is something God does not know. Rather it says it would be nonsensical for God to know it because if he did then it would be. The implications of God definitively knowing the future would mean that we would already be actualized in our state which God knows we would be. Ergo double predestination.
However, this argument is usually countered by saying God exists outside of time therefore God sees all. While this in itself is very convincing at face value, I am unable to explain myself after the following explanation of knowledge is given:
All intuition must come through the material or the sensible. This is the case because there are no explicit Forms of anything, rather the form of everything is in the particular itself. By sensing the particular, the object can then be abstracted and all the possibilities and limits can be understood. These possibilities and limits is essentially what the form is, it says what the thing could be and still at the same time remain the kind of thing it is. As far as I know this epistemological view is extremely Thomistic, as it is virtually identical to St. Aquinas’ Naive Realism.
However, this understanding of knowledge completely and utterly destroys the argument for God knowing the future definitively at the rational level. Of course God can still make very accurate estimations through probability, since He/She has practical knowledge of everything in all of Creation.
This leads me to my request. I would really appreciate it if someone could point me in the right direction as to what St. Aquinas would say on the issue. I’m very curious what position he held because this problem directly stems from Naive Realism.
Basically there are two positions and they go as follows:
The first asserts that God knows everything, definitively, even that of the future. The argument goes like this.
God is all-knowing.
knowledge of the future includes everything.
Therefore God knows the future.
However, the second argument is developed in direct opposition to this argument. It goes as follows.
The future is not yet.
What is not yet, does not exist.
Therefore, what does not exist cannot be known.
Of course this position holds that the future cannot be known definitively. It appears that we can definitely make very very good estimations, or even guesses if you are skeptic, as probability is really just the mathematics behind potentiality and actuality. Also notice, this view does not question God’s Omniscience because it doesn’t say there is something God does not know. Rather it says it would be nonsensical for God to know it because if he did then it would be. The implications of God definitively knowing the future would mean that we would already be actualized in our state which God knows we would be. Ergo double predestination.
However, this argument is usually countered by saying God exists outside of time therefore God sees all. While this in itself is very convincing at face value, I am unable to explain myself after the following explanation of knowledge is given:
All intuition must come through the material or the sensible. This is the case because there are no explicit Forms of anything, rather the form of everything is in the particular itself. By sensing the particular, the object can then be abstracted and all the possibilities and limits can be understood. These possibilities and limits is essentially what the form is, it says what the thing could be and still at the same time remain the kind of thing it is. As far as I know this epistemological view is extremely Thomistic, as it is virtually identical to St. Aquinas’ Naive Realism.
However, this understanding of knowledge completely and utterly destroys the argument for God knowing the future definitively at the rational level. Of course God can still make very accurate estimations through probability, since He/She has practical knowledge of everything in all of Creation.
This leads me to my request. I would really appreciate it if someone could point me in the right direction as to what St. Aquinas would say on the issue. I’m very curious what position he held because this problem directly stems from Naive Realism.