EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...All of these assume volition on the part of God but leave the details mysterious...
I suppose that most of the "details" of the "black box" would have to be mysterious--else it wouldn't be a black box.
And we can say anything we want about a black box without fear of contradiction as long as we assume it is an impenetrable black box. Like assuming volition on the part of God and calling the problem areas mysteries. In religion class we were expected to take the mysteries on faith. But when we are presumably taking a logical approach without reliance on faith, it is suspicious. (BTW, my screen name comes from overhearing a religion teacher sighing that girl again to another teacher after class.

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EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...For there to even be bases (plural of basis BTW) requires something existing prior to God, who is supposed to be the ground of existence. There must be things built into the very idea of existence that inform Gods judgment...
I would say that God can consider an infinite range of possibilities, without necessarily actualizing an infinite range of possibilities. If God is free, then God can choose according to whatever internal criteria God wishes. You are saying that God must choose all possibilities, and therefore God cannot be free. But this is a circular assertion, for if God is free (or if God chooses to be free) then God can do as God pleases.
I am saying that God has no basis for making decisions on which possibilities to actualize. If choices on made based on nothing, how is this different from random? Why should that be called volition?
EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...If there are not, Gods choices are simply arbitrary and random. This is not what humans call volition...
Not random, but according to value. If, as I suggested previously, God decided to NOT actualize all possibilities, but rather chose to offload some of the decision-making to significantly free creatures with the capacity to learn and overcome significant obstacles on the way to ever-greater God-likeness, how can we then make the "arbitrary" charge stick?
Again, if this universe is Gods choice for us out of all possibilities, why is it so irrelevant to us in almost every respect? Claiming this universe is designed with us in mind would appear to be an assumption with no real backing. How do you get to the conclusion that a supernatural being made this universe in order to watch us make decisions without first assuming that is the case?
EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...Humans make judgments based on looking at the existing situation and deciding among alternatives. With God there could be no existing situation to look at, nothing having been created yet...
You seem to suppose that God has no capacity for foresight--no capacity to peruse the full spectrum of as-yet-unrealized possibility, and make a free selection according to value. I still don't see how you justify such an assumption.
What is that value based on? How does God choose what is valuable and what is not without some pre-existing means of making a decision. Foresight does not help without already existing standards for making choices.
EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...There are many ways in which universes could have been made to facilitate meaningful and mutual relationships with significantly free creatures. Why exactly this one? And especially since this one makes such relationships really difficult...
Well--to throw out one possibility--God could have deemed it important that we encounter significant challenges, so as to give us an opportunity to overcome these challenges on our way to bigger and better things. The "problems" in our universe are either caused by us (through wrong action or through apathy) or else simply part of the mix of obstacles that God allows for our development.
Why would God want us to develop? What constitutes development? Where does Gods value system come from?
EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...Volition as we know it is a conscious decision based on available information. To God there is no available information before creating the world. A specific decision is not based on anything. It might as well be chance and/or necessity...
I don't see why we can't have "conscious decision based on available
foresight" (and with God, this "foresight" would indeed represent all as-yet-unrealized possibilities).
Again, foresight does not help unless there is already a set of standards for making decisions. Where did that standard come from?
EduChris wrote:
We don't fully know how we make volitional decisions. Yes, we know we are influenced and even at times manipulated, but still we understand that we make responsible decisions and we are responsible for the outcomes of our decisions. A random decision imposes itself on us; a volitional decision is our only way of taking ownership for the causal chain which flows from that decision.
I have nothing against volitional decisions and see no need to make them mechanical artifacts as some materialists do. Nonetheless we make decisions based on information. Before God creates anything there is no information. And information from foresight requires standards on which to base decisions. Saying that there are some kind of natural standards of goodness built into the idea of existence itself
but that these standards can be violated does not make sense to me. That is some complicated assuming going on there.
EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...This is hardly our universe. Its design clearly has essentially nothing to do with us...
I think science generally is amazed at how this universe does seem designed for life--in fact, the very idea of a multiverse appeals to science precisely because it makes it easier for them to deny what otherwise would constitute all-but-undeniable design.
If the universe is so designed for life, why is the vast majority of it " and I mean
lots of decimal places vast " utterly inhospitable to life? If the universe is designed we are an accidental byproduct. An excellent case can be made that the universe is designed for making black holes, which then lead to new universes that usually have the properties needed for making more black holes. (
Ref) evolutionary processes would result in most universes being also able to sustain in some tiny portions.
EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...God may have made it for a purpose but we are not it. To claim otherwise is a
highly dubious assertion...
We remain the most significant creatures in the known universe. Given that fact, why should we suppose it was designed for some less significant creature?
We are significant to ourselves. But God may think stars are the most significant things in the universe. They are really impressive in how they work and what they do. And he sure made a lot of them.
EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...As is to think that we are amazing and magnificent compared to what could have been...
Lacking omniscience, we cannot really know "what could have been," especially if God designed the universe so that our choices could have meaningful (if unpleasant at times) consequences.
Meaningful according to what standards? Where did these standards come from?
EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...And if the purpose of it all is for us to engage in meaningful activity and moral deliberation for Godsamusement?...
All we can do is speculate, but it seems natural to suppose that if God is inherently relational, then God might wish to enjoy genuine, mutual relationships with creatures who can be groomed for such relationships.
Why should God be inherently relational?
EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...how does the high infant mortality rate throughout the world and history fit into that? Likewise death rates in general. We just get to the point where we know something important about life and we die. (A paraphrase of one of the last things my grandfather said.)...
High infant mortality rates are, for the most part, due to human neglect and greed. Disease and accidents could be significantly reduced through changes in human behavior. Almost anything that is "bad" in this world could be made better through human cooperation and foresight and discipline.
High infant mortality rates and most of the bad news aspects of life are due to this being a nasty world for individual life, despite its being the extremely rare example of a place where life can even exist. Despite the catchiness of the phrase, it is not about survival of the fittest. It is survival of the fit enough. An organism, like us for instance, that manages to reproduce reliably enough for its genetic line not to vanish will continue in spite of the misery experienced by individuals along the way. If this is designed, that design is about genes, not people.
EduChris wrote:
And death is not necessarily an obstacle for God. Perhaps it is simply a transition into something bigger and better. Granted, the possibility of an afterlife does add one more assumption into the theistic mix, but it is hardly as egregious as the assumption that "all possibilities must necessarily exist," as I think you are suggesting.
I am definitely suggesting that. It arises from simple logical premises, two of which are pretty much undeniable. Here it is again.
A is A, a thing is what it is.
A is not not-A, contradictions do not exist.
If A can be, it is.
Voila! An infinite number of universes embodying all possibilities. No need to explain where God or anything else came from.
The third assumption merely suggests that logic is the foundation of existence. This is a fairly small step past saying that logic is inherent in reality.
On the other hand your belief in an afterlife is based on what?
EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...To think that God did all this
deliberately and for no special reason when an infinite number of other possibilities were available is really scary...
I imagine the "scariness" depends more on one's assumptions and one's personal life-history than on logic.
What set of assumptions and life history would make this the best of all possible worlds. In his
Essays Leibniz put forth this claim to solve the problem of evil. (
Ref) I do not have it handy but I recall him saying that if more than one world were equally satisfactory God would have made more than one. But different worlds could not all be equally satisfactory so this must be the best one possible. I am saying that there is no pre-existing standard on what is satisfactory so there is no theological obstacle to all of them existing.
EduChris wrote:
ThatGirlAgain wrote:...I still see no reason to require a conscious God as the ground of existence. As I discussed at length in the other thread...If A can be, it is...Voila! An infinite number of universes embodying all possibilities. No need to explain where God or anything else came from.
I hardly think this is the most parsimonious explanation. In fact, when a number of non-theists here (mistakenly) attributed such an "explanation" to a theist, the non-theists roundly and sharply criticized the notion (not that this necessarily counts against the notion, I suppose).
As I explained above, it is highly parsimonious, requiring only the existence of logic. And (as you noted) trying to discredit an argument based on who said it is not exactly kosher. Also, never forget that this puppy is a mongrel. I owe no allegiance to any party.
EduChris wrote:
But anyway, to assume that all possibilities are necessarily instantiated is to explain nothing--and it runs contrary to the scientific method, since in that case it would be possible for us to rationally suppose that, despite all appearances, this universe sprang into being a second ago (or any other fantastic claim we could devise). Far less profligate is the assumption that God chooses from infinite possibility on the basis of value--and in the case of our universe, God chose to create a universe of order and reason, amenable to creatures capable of discovering and appreciating and employing reason.
No, my proposal does not allow the universe to have sprung into existence a second ago. There would be no logical progression, no explanation for all the details. It would not be a coherent and logically consistent possibility. On the other hand, it is entirely possible for God to have done this.
EduChris wrote:
In the end, perhaps neither of us will convince the other to change our respective views. In the interest of furthering the discussion, will you grant that if genuine volition is possible for God, then we cannot exclude it from the mix of causal mechanisms, in which case theism becomes epistemically justified?
The bare bones definition of theism is that there is a creator deity. This does not necessarily require volition. Imagine the omni-verse I describe but with each universe being a separate thought of the divine Thinker of All Thoughts. A universe would be the logical unfolding of the initial premises that constitute the individual thought. But that would bring us to Cantors
Absolute Infinite and I am already behind on school work. Project/paper due dates and Finals coming up real soon. And then there is work.
In any case, even if creator deity, volitional or not, were postulated, I still see no connection with religion.
I may be slow in following upon this thread for reasons referenced above. Come on, lottery!