by jimwalton » Tue Feb 18, 2020 5:47 pm
> Consciousness is just another characteristic.
I disagree. Trees have limbs, and I have limbs—those are characteristics. But a tree doesn't have consciousness. That's an attribute of my nature. I would still be human without limbs; I would not still be human without consciousness.
> I can't choose to not be conscious, and I can't choose what I'm conscious of.
Correct, because consciousness is a necessary attribute. Nor can you choose whether or not to think. Nor can you choose to transport yourself to the rings of Saturn. These immutables don't mean you have no free will, or that you're somewhat the same as a tree.
> just as you think God can't do things "willy nilly", I can't either.
Correct. We can only do things that are proper objects of our power.
> How does God making them disappear not constitute a real action?
Oh, it's a real action, but that's not what I said. What I said is that He can't defy reality. Once humans are born, according to the Scriptures, we exist a souls that continue on past this life. For God to make a human disappear would be an repudiation of that reality, and therefore such an action is contrary to fact and not possible.
> If he created them without precedent, surely he can also extinguish them?
Lives can be ended so that they transition to death, but they cannot be magically extinguished *in nihilo*.
> Surely he would know the nature of what he is creating and thus be more aware than us what path we are going down?
Yes, certainly.
> He would also know what would make us respond in a particular way: for example, if I was to do something wrong but which I thought was right, I would respond by not doing the wrong action if God showed me evidence of it being bad.
I disagree. I have shown my kids evidence of things being bad, and they weren't dissuaded one bit: down the wrong path they chose to go. I can plead, show love, show evidence, reason, and even pressure. Nope. They choose what they want.
There just may be nothing more He can do to motivate us to love Him. I was just listening to Bonnie Raitt yesterday: "I can't make you love me if you don't; I can't make your heart feel something it won't." With God it's not about religion, it's about love.
> Influence and direction. Another example is the Sun. It has power and influence over the nature of our world, without having free will.
We obviously have very different definitions of free will. I know free will is pretty tough to define without allowing any loopholes. I can only sort of describe its characteristics and its necessity. It's the modulation of ongoing action, the distinguishing of potential courses, the ability to reason, the exercise of autonomy, and the consequent self-direction of thought and behavior. Those have nothing to do with electricity or the Sun.
> Consciousness is just another characteristic.
I disagree. Trees have limbs, and I have limbs—those are characteristics. But a tree doesn't have consciousness. That's an attribute of my nature. I would still be human without limbs; I would not still be human without consciousness.
> I can't choose to not be conscious, and I can't choose what I'm conscious of.
Correct, because consciousness is a necessary attribute. Nor can you choose whether or not to think. Nor can you choose to transport yourself to the rings of Saturn. These immutables don't mean you have no free will, or that you're somewhat the same as a tree.
> just as you think God can't do things "willy nilly", I can't either.
Correct. We can only do things that are proper objects of our power.
> How does God making them disappear not constitute a real action?
Oh, it's a real action, but that's not what I said. What I said is that He can't defy reality. Once humans are born, according to the Scriptures, we exist a souls that continue on past this life. For God to make a human disappear would be an repudiation of that reality, and therefore such an action is contrary to fact and not possible.
> If he created them without precedent, surely he can also extinguish them?
Lives can be ended so that they transition to death, but they cannot be magically extinguished *in nihilo*.
> Surely he would know the nature of what he is creating and thus be more aware than us what path we are going down?
Yes, certainly.
> He would also know what would make us respond in a particular way: for example, if I was to do something wrong but which I thought was right, I would respond by not doing the wrong action if God showed me evidence of it being bad.
I disagree. I have shown my kids evidence of things being bad, and they weren't dissuaded one bit: down the wrong path they chose to go. I can plead, show love, show evidence, reason, and even pressure. Nope. They choose what they want.
There just may be [i]nothing[/i] more He can do to motivate us to love Him. I was just listening to Bonnie Raitt yesterday: "I can't make you love me if you don't; I can't make your heart feel something it won't." With God it's not about religion, it's about love.
> Influence and direction. Another example is the Sun. It has power and influence over the nature of our world, without having free will.
We obviously have very different definitions of free will. I know free will is pretty tough to define without allowing any loopholes. I can only sort of describe its characteristics and its necessity. It's the modulation of ongoing action, the distinguishing of potential courses, the ability to reason, the exercise of autonomy, and the consequent self-direction of thought and behavior. Those have nothing to do with electricity or the Sun.