Abstract
AbstractTheological incompatibility argumentssuggest God's comprehensive foreknowledge is incompatible with human free will.Logical incompatibility argumentssuggest a complete set of truths about the future is logically incompatible with human free will. Of the two, most think theological incompatibility is the more severe problem; but hardly anyone thinks either kind of argument presents a real threat to free will. I will argue, however, that sound theological and logical incompatibility arguments exist and that, in fact, logical incompatibly is the more severe problem. A deep analysis of the arguments will reveal that, to avoid a fatalist conclusion, we must reject bivalence and adopt a specific kind of temporal ontology (presentism), which also forces the theist to embrace open theism.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Philosophy,Religious studies
Reference41 articles.
1. Johnson David Kyle (2006) ‘Divine omniscience and the fatalist dilemma’ (University of Oklahoma: unpublished Ph.D dissertation).
2. Trinity, Temporality, and Open Theism
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13 articles.
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