Nitai wrote: ↑February 22nd, 2021, 3:14 am
God knows how you will react according to you conditioning but you can go beyond you conditioning by Love of God, then it really becomes interesting, for Him and for you.
So you have Free will to either choose your conditioning or to choose to know and Love God.
Your assertion doesn't address the question posed by the subject line of this thread: "If God is all-knowing, then how can I have free will?"
Please consider the point I made 10 days ago: "Since God has foreknowledge of all of my future choices, God certainly knows what I'm going to choose to eat for dinner tomorrow (or whether I'll choose to eat dinner at all). Being omnipotent, God also has the power to tell me today what my choice tomorrow is going to be. Assume that God does tell me today. Can I now change my choice while there's still time? If I can't, then I don't have free will. If I can and do change it, then God was misinformed."
What's your analysis of that one?
Incidentally, my example didn't have to include the element of "free will", the meaning of which can be debated. I put it in there because that's what the thread is about. Even the strictest determinist surely will concede that people make
choices, regardless of how "free" those choices may be or whether they're free at all. It seems clear that if, after certain events have been set in motion toward a specific "unfree" choice being made, an all-seeing super-magician disrupts the chain of causation by telling the chooser what the latter is about to choose, the chooser can then change his mind. Causation simply works that way. The Big Reveal then merely forms part of a deterministic chain leading to a different choice, contradicting the assumption either that the final choice had already been accurately foreseen
before the Big Reveal or that it was in fact accurately revealed. So the basic problem isn't the combination of
free choice and God's foreknowledge. God's supposed foreknowledge, combined with his ability to tell people what their choices are going to be (a power that doesn't even require God to be omnipotent) is problematic in and of itself.
All of this could be avoided by simply conceding that "omniscience" means nothing more "knowing what can be known," and that final choices cannot be known if God has the capacity to tell people ahead of time what their choices are going to be. But I seriously doubt it's possible to get any religious fundamentalist to concede this obvious point.