Then it’s no good as a defense. For evil not to be gratuitous the good which could not have existed but for the evil must outweigh the evil.
this is just not right. at
all.
it is possible (and, in fact, true) that the goods at stake in morally relevant free choices are
incommensurable, and thus neither better or worse than, nor equal to each other.
SeekingCatholic:
It implies it, even if it doesn’t mention the term by name. The crux is that God could not actualize a world containing creatures with free will in which everyone chose rightly. Will you agree that this is the basic premise of any free will defense? The free will defense claims that moral good could not exist but for the existence of moral evil.
yes, i will agree, with the proviso that the defense simply attempts to establish that it is
possible that things be this way.
SeekingCatholic:
So you are saying there is something a creature can do but God cannot do! You’ve completely thrown traditional theology on its head. The very definition of “impossible” in classical theism is “something God cannot do”.
of ***course ***there are things that i can do that god can’t; there are ***lots ***of things: he can’t do anything the doing of which is ***me ***doing it, because god is not and cannot
be me.
god cannot think my thoughts for me, or eat my breakfast for me, or run to catch the bus for me, or post this reply on this forum for me. of course ***god ***could do all of those things for
himself, but then it would be ***him ***doing them. he could ***cause ***me to do them, but it is still ***me ***doing them. only
i can make these propositions true:
john doran is scratching his head;
john doran is running to catch the bus;
…and so on.
in the same way, only
i can make my own free choices; how could this be something that anyone
else does?
(incidentally, the same thing applies to “omniscience”: i know what it feels like to be me, but god doesn’t. how could he?)
SeekingCatholic:
Now, your version might in a sense be possible if God only knows the free choices his creatures will make as a result of them choosing them (which you seem to hold, and which puts us right into open-view theology, IMO created specifically to deal with the problem of moral evil, but sacrificing a traditional aspect of God’s omniscience). E.g., God doesn’t “know” which world to actualize prior to its actualization to bring about the desired free choices of creatures.
that’s just
not the only way to look at it…
god ***does ***know what his free creatures choose in
every possible world, and his knowledge of those counterfactuals of creaturely freedom is his middle knowledge.
SeekingCatholic:
However, according to classical theism and the traditional understanding of omniscience God knows prior to the actualization of the world what the free choices of the created beings are going to be, and that means prior to the creatures actually making those choices. Therefore it is up to God to actualize the world in which the various choice-outcomes exist, for He knows what they will be prior to the actualization.
just because he knows what will be chosen doesn’t mean that he can actualize any of the worlds in which those choices occur: when he knows what each free choice will be, he also knows which worlds he cannot actualize
consistently with those free choices.
SeekingCatholic:
Could He have actualized a world (with the same world-segments, etc.) but in which the created beings in fact chose differently? The free-will defense answer must be “no”, which means, according to the above, that such a world must not be possible. Yet the free-will defense also insists that such a world is possible to preserve “significant freedom”. There’s a contradiction.
sigh. we’re going round in circles here…
each world in which a free choice is made
is possible (both metaphysically and logically), it’s just not possible for
god to actualize, so there’s
no contradiction at all.
you seem to assume that the only sense of “possible” that is capable of grounding both god’s omniscience/omnipotence,
and creaturely freedom is something like “capable of being actualized by god”. but why should anyone believe that?
SeekingCatholic:
So again you do hold there exists a metaphysically possible world not actualizable by God. I claim this makes God not omnipotent.
ok. and i claim it doesn’t.
how can anyone actualize my free choices but me? seems like a similar question to: how can god make a square circle?
SeekingCatholic:
Then you must hold that actualizing another being’s free choice is metaphysically or logically impossible. However there is nothing prima facie impossible about it, and as you are well aware one large school of philosophical thought (Thomism) holds that God can do and actually does just that.
thomism understood in that way is wrong…
the version of thomas’ view of god’s sovereignty and creaturely freedom to which i subscribe is logically equivalent to molinism, and as between them i am indifferent.
as far as i can see, thomas’ view is that when god creates free creatures, what he creates is an ontology of events and objects - he creates “john-doran-freely-choosing-to-eat-cornfakes”, because he knows that’s what i would choose. and which
also means that thomas’ god
can’t just create any freely chosen act that he wants (or elose he wouldn’t be creating something making a free choice)…
SeekingCatholic:
I’m not mistaken, and it matters a great deal. You can’t have your version of “significant freedom” and Molinism at the same time.
i continue to think you’re wrong about this.
but, again, it doesn’t matter at all because i’m not defending a historical position - a position associated with a certain name - i’m defending the position that seems to be
correct. and maybe it’s not anything that can reasonably be called “molinism”. but so what?
SeekingCathoic:
This is not what scientia media is grounded in - which is precisely why there is a grounding objection in the first place - because the chooser and the choice might not exist.
it’s the ground
claimed for god’s middle knowledge. whether or not that’s
actually its ground is disputed.
SeekingCatholic:
You are saying that when God knows that “if A were in situation B, he would choose C” it is not a hypothetical knowledge which has a truth-value of “true” even if A never exists, or situation B never exists, at all. It is a mere knowledge that A actually is (or was, or will be) in situation B and actually chose C in that situation. This is not Molinist scientia media.
no. this is not what i’m saying.
SeekingCatholic:
Now if there is a possible world in which A were in situation B and did not choose C then the counterfactual of creaturely freedom is false. It is not the case that if A were in situation B, he would choose C. Yet you must insist that this is a possible world to preserve your idea of “significant freedom”. So you are faced with a contradiction. You’re actually a closet open-viewer.
no: it’s not what occurs in each
possible world - it’s what
would occur in each possible world
if that world were actual.
and i don’t care what you call the position: just call it “correct”.