more from this thinker     |     more from this text


Single Idea 8055

[filed under theme 28. God / A. Divine Nature / 4. Divine Contradictions ]

Full Idea

Omniscience excludes the making of decisions. If God knows everything that will occur, he confronts no as yet unmade decisions.

Gist of Idea

If God is omniscient, he confronts no as yet unmade decisions, so decisions are impossible

Source

Alasdair MacIntyre (After Virtue: a Study in Moral Theory [1981], Ch. 8)

Book Ref

MacIntyre,Alasdair: 'After Virtue: a Study in Moral Theory' [Duckworth 1982], p.92


A Reaction

[He cites Aquinas on this] I find it very difficult to see how anyone could read the Bible (see Idea 8008) while keeping this point continually in mind, without seeing the whole book as a piece of blatant anthropomorphism.

Related Idea

Idea 8008 The Bible is a story about God in which humans are incidental characters [MacIntyre]


The 17 ideas with the same theme [contradictions in our concept of a supreme being]:

In Empedocles' theory God is ignorant because, unlike humans, he doesn't know one of the elements (strife) [Aristotle on Empedocles]
If Plato's God is immaterial, he will lack consciousness, wisdom, pleasure and movement, which are essential to him [Cicero on Plato]
Why shouldn't the gods fear their own destruction? [Cicero]
God can do anything non-contradictory, as making straightness with no line, or lightness with no parts [Auriol]
An omnipotent will cannot make two things equal or alike if they aren't [Cudworth]
Perfections must have overlapping parts if their incompatibility is to be proved [Leibniz]
A God who cures us of a head cold at the right moment is a total absurdity [Nietzsche]
It is hard to grasp a cosmic mind which produces such a mixture of goods and evils [James]
A person with non-empirical attributes is unintelligible. [Ayer]
You can only know the limits of knowledge if you know the other side of the limit [Searle]
If God is omniscient, he confronts no as yet unmade decisions, so decisions are impossible [MacIntyre]
In the Bible God changes his mind (repenting of creating humanity, in the Flood) [Armstrong,K]
Presumably God can do anything which is logically possible [Chalmers]
Omniscience is incoherent, since knowledge is a social concept [Kusch]
God cannot experience unwanted pain, so God cannot understand human beings [Sorensen]
How could God know there wasn't an unknown force controlling his 'free' will? [PG]
An omniscient being couldn't know it was omniscient, as that requires information from beyond its scope of knowledge [PG]