 Originally Posted by * Diamond Eyes *
Yea, free will is a pretty tough subject to touch on.. If God is all knowing, then he must know what choices people will make? It implies that not only has God always known what choices individuals will make tomorrow, but has actually determined those choices. That is, by virtue of his foreknowledge he knows what will influence individual choices, and by virtue of his omnipotence he controls those factors....
This is all fine. What you described is one important thing and something I would agree upon. But what is even more important is my question on what exactly free will is, how do I know I have it, how can I prove it, and if it exists how does it interact with the universe.
The whole point of free will as most people see it, I think, is that there is a source... that's it. There is a source that directs. This source, apparently acts externally and is not influenced. If you disagree with this you throw out the purpose and only meaningful component of the "free-willed soul", reducing us to beings determined by the universe, with only the illusion of free will. (This really is very complicated, for the most part because people never define it, so it floats around jumping one way or another, but whatever.)
So what is free will. Everybody takes it for granted and it's obvious, but I really don't get it. Especially with the knowledge we have gained with science on the matter of the human mind. The idea of free will is basic responsibility - A choice was made, someone made it. For responsibility to have any value at all, it must be connected to our experience of ourselves - mainly our perception of, well doing something. In a causal system responsibility has no meaning, because things are determined. Is it really the asteroids fault for killing the dinosaurs or is it the gravity...something else perhaps? Things go from ...->A->B->C etc. Free will can only exist with the human notion of percieved self awarness and actualization. Because the human consciousness "feels" the making of the choice "out of nothing".
The point I'm trying to make is that thoughts don't come out of nothing and we know this. Therefore the idea of hell & heaven is all about sending determined souls with determined choices to determined places. It's all so senseles and IMO stupid to be taken seriously. I mean... I'm perfectly aware that this could just be a metaphysical way of throwing the shiny apples in the shiny box and the rotten ones in the shitty box as dictated by some "metaversal Walmart legislation" (God). If this is the case, then I guess it's just the infinitely worse situation of squishing some bugs thinking "too bad for the ant, life sucks". Ooooh yes... the major religious views don't even give us - the rotten apples - a chance to die and be used as fertilizer. No, no, they are being punished! How dare they be rotten! The bastards must suffer for ever! And to that I say...I didn't ask to be born. And if it all really is about cause and effect (as opposed to me just poping out of nowhere and be responible for the spontaneous incarnation I had no part in) then I deserve no punishment as much as the "saved ones" deserve no grace.
My thoughts are basically that we live in this universe where things interact and seem to have a strong causal relationship (let's leave quantum mechanics interpretations out of this for now, so it's pretty much absolute). What would a "smaller" causal system inside the grand causal system - the cosmos - look like? My claim is that it would manifest as a consciousness with the illusion of free will. The reason we're even debating this complicated topic now is because our thought experiments on time travel or precognition and it's implications just do not compute. Mashing up determinism directly together with free will just doesn't make sense for a consciousness that percieves itself seperately from everything else, especially as the source of decisions and thus free will. But we are a part of the universe.  :peace:
I hope I got some of my thoughts across well enough.
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