B
blase6
Guest
I tried asking this in an earlier thread which didn’t work.
We start by examining Church teaching on the nature of God. The Church claims that God has freedom. As in, God does not have to do that which he wills.
From God’s nature as the necessary being, we can conclude that all that is part of God’s basic nature is necessary. So if God has freedom, then freedom is a necessary part of God’s nature.
But why? Why does personal existence require freedom? Can not God be a mechanistic creator of the rest of the universe, which by extension would also exist necessarily? Would not that be more reasonable, than to believe in self-deterministic causality, which cannot be understood in comparison to all other forms of causality?
We start by examining Church teaching on the nature of God. The Church claims that God has freedom. As in, God does not have to do that which he wills.
From God’s nature as the necessary being, we can conclude that all that is part of God’s basic nature is necessary. So if God has freedom, then freedom is a necessary part of God’s nature.
But why? Why does personal existence require freedom? Can not God be a mechanistic creator of the rest of the universe, which by extension would also exist necessarily? Would not that be more reasonable, than to believe in self-deterministic causality, which cannot be understood in comparison to all other forms of causality?