P
Partinobodycula
Guest
Fair enough.And I agree with Aquinas. But I still disagree with you that consciousness is an emergent phenomenon per se. God is aware (conscious) of reality precisely because there is no reality without him. Consciousness included.
It seems to me that you have indeed claimed that change is ultimately an illusion. If every act of compassion, love, and I think you mean everything, exists in one time and place in the physical universe, then isn’t any change we experience in our time still illusory? Everything already “is”. Then there’s nothing to change into, nothing to become. You can only become if there is something else to attain, some goal to reach. You don’t have to achieve the goal to undergo change, but there has to be an end in the first place.
As I said before, you can choose to look at it that way. Just as some people choose to believe that God’s omniscience means that free will is only an illusion. What God knows doesn’t preordain what you choose. And in like manner, even if every possible change, every possible outcome, every possible path, already exists for God, you still have to choose which one you will take. For you, every potential outcome is still possible, every change still happens. God’s omniscience doesn’t change that.
Aquinas describes a God in whom there is no potentiality, and without the potential for change, there can be no change. But you’re not God. For you the potential is real, and the change is real. For God every path exists, but for you, only one.