Sunday, November 3, 2013

Omniscient God and Free Will



Free will is having a choice from a set of alternatives in order to independently and freely define ones own future (O’Conner). There is always a first cause and the cause is what determined the effect or consequences. Where Pikes argument comes in is the contradiction between an all-knowing God and the matter of free will (Pike 57-73). Pike (57-53) claims this if God is all knowing he must know our life course from beginning to end. If this is true then all action I am to commit have already been determined and known to be, so how is one to do otherwise (Pike 57-73)? Essentially there are two choices, God is either not all knowing or we are truly aren’t free if our life is already known. Free will is to make spontaneous decisions and not to have a predetermined future.

So if God knows our life course does that mean it is already determined? We live in a world of physical laws in which we have no choice but to follow (Sosa). We live in a world that was created by a cause or the “big bang,” and the Earth is merely a byproduct of it all (Sosa). Furthermore, we are byproducts of the Earth. Our lives were created by a cause (physiological forces) and while we may have the choice to not wake up in the morning or go out for a run, our choices aren’t determined by free will (Pink), but rather by the neurological-receptors in our brain (Sosa), for without them we wouldn’t be capable to make a choice. Our bodies are simply elements of the world put together as a complex organism.

So if our bodies are nothing other than byproducts of this world and the things we do are nothing other than chemical reactions and physiological forces obeying the laws of physics, than what is the point of living? If there is no such thing as “free will,” than what is the purpose of what we do? Why do we try so hard to be successful if it is already determined? These questions are important to humanities meaning. However people believe in free will not because they are simply ignorant, but because it gives purpose to life, and without purpose we are nothing other than an object. A rock (an object) has no purpose other than to be a rock, but humans’ like to believe that they have a higher purpose (although rocks an humans are both byproducts of the world) and that we don’t live by the physiological rules of the world.

The bottom line:
  • If God doesn’t know the entire plan of my life, then God is not all knowing (omnicient). 
  • If God is indeed omniscient (all knowing), he/she will know the entire plan of my life. 
  • How can I truly act otherwise if my life’s plan is already known? 

Works Cited:

O'Conner, Timothy. "Free Will." 2. 2010. <http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/freewill/>.

Pike, Nelson. Divine Omniscience and Voluntary Action. 57-73. Web. <http://commonsenseatheism.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/Pike-Divine-Omniscience-and-Voluntary-Action.pdf>.

Pink, Thomas, perf. "Thomas Pink on Free Will." Philosophy Bites. N.p., 09 Mar 2008. web. 3 Apr 2013.


Sosa, David, perf. Waking Life-Free Will. Dir. Richard Linklater. 2001. Film. 3 Apr 2013. <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=veqkUUOlLLE&feature=player_embedded>.

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