...or that he knew Peter!mistermack wrote:So Jesus said to Peter ''before the cock crows, you will have denied me three times'', proving that he knew the future

...or that he knew Peter!mistermack wrote:So Jesus said to Peter ''before the cock crows, you will have denied me three times'', proving that he knew the future
"Pre-ordained" assumes that some directive force has determined the outcome in some deliberate manner. That's not what happens in a multiverse. "You", which is to say the individual who is faced with a choice, are still free to make that choice. Upon making that choice universes divide and a new "you" follows the other path. No agency requires that you make the choice or determines which choice you will make. Therefore, nothing is pre-ordained and you have free will. Your exercise of that free will does, however, have the consequence of the generation of another alternate universe in which a different "you" experiences different consequences of that decision.mistermack wrote:--------------------------------------------Seth wrote: In the multiverse theory of cosmology, each decision point leads to a branching off of a new set of universes where all possible decisions and their outcomes occur.
Thus, he knows if you're going to wank tonight by virtue of the fact that you can wank tonight or you can not wank tonight, which creates two futures in each of which one of the choices occurs, and God sees BOTH outcomes at the same time, thus having knowledge, without actually interfering with or preordaining your free will to make the decision.
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Sure you do. You can wank or not wank. Just because there are consequences for both doesn't mean you don't have free will to choose, it just means that your path divides based upon your decision.
You don't understand your own posts. At the top, you are theorising that ALL choices occur.
Below, you're talking about one path, wank or not wank.
To be consistent, in your multiverse, the choice is wank, AND not wank. ie, not a choice at all.
Both choices are pre-ordained if all possible decisions and their outcomes occur.
He may have been referring to only one of many possible futures. In another future Peter didn't and Jesus did something else and the bible says something else.So Jesus said to Peter ''before the cock crows, you will have denied me three times'', proving that he knew the future, and that Peter had no free will.
If you believe the bible.
You still can't get your head around your own theory. It's not ''possible'' futures, according to your theory.Seth wrote:He may have been referring to only one of many possible futures. In another future Peter didn't and Jesus did something else and the bible says something else.So Jesus said to Peter ''before the cock crows, you will have denied me three times'', proving that he knew the future, and that Peter had no free will.
If you believe the bible.
Or maybe the whole scenario never happened and it was all invented by someone that wrote down a bunch of garbled, oral legends a couple of hundred years after they were supposed to have happened. Nah! That's just too far-fetched compared to a god that dwells in all possible multiverses at once...mistermack wrote:You still can't get your head around your own theory. It's not ''possible'' futures, according to your theory.Seth wrote:He may have been referring to only one of many possible futures. In another future Peter didn't and Jesus did something else and the bible says something else.So Jesus said to Peter ''before the cock crows, you will have denied me three times'', proving that he knew the future, and that Peter had no free will.
If you believe the bible.
It's certain futures. You keep contradicting your own posts.
And if in another future Peter didn't, then in that case, Jesus got it wrong. Not very godlike.
Yeh, it's a bit telling that even Seth needs the most extreme of multiverse theories to try to defend the god concept.Xamonas Chegwé wrote: Or maybe the whole scenario never happened and it was all invented by someone that wrote down a bunch of garbled, oral legends a couple of hundred years after they were supposed to have happened. Nah! That's just too far-fetched compared to a god that dwells in all possible multiverses at once...
One could almost say, a total misunderstanding of it. But, of course, I would not go that far...mistermack wrote:Yeh, it's a bit telling that even Seth needs the most extreme of multiverse theories to try to defend the god concept.Xamonas Chegwé wrote: Or maybe the whole scenario never happened and it was all invented by someone that wrote down a bunch of garbled, oral legends a couple of hundred years after they were supposed to have happened. Nah! That's just too far-fetched compared to a god that dwells in all possible multiverses at once...
And a bollocks version of it, to boot.
It's possible futures to you. The question is not whether all possible futures will occur, it's which of those futures you choose through an exercise of your free will.mistermack wrote:You still can't get your head around your own theory. It's not ''possible'' futures, according to your theory.Seth wrote:He may have been referring to only one of many possible futures. In another future Peter didn't and Jesus did something else and the bible says something else.So Jesus said to Peter ''before the cock crows, you will have denied me three times'', proving that he knew the future, and that Peter had no free will.
If you believe the bible.
It's certain futures. You keep contradicting your own posts.
And if in another future Peter didn't, then in that case, Jesus got it wrong. Not very godlike.
It's not at all unlikely that what you claim occurred. But that's beside the point.Xamonas Chegwé wrote:Or maybe the whole scenario never happened and it was all invented by someone that wrote down a bunch of garbled, oral legends a couple of hundred years after they were supposed to have happened. Nah! That's just too far-fetched compared to a god that dwells in all possible multiverses at once...mistermack wrote:You still can't get your head around your own theory. It's not ''possible'' futures, according to your theory.Seth wrote:He may have been referring to only one of many possible futures. In another future Peter didn't and Jesus did something else and the bible says something else.So Jesus said to Peter ''before the cock crows, you will have denied me three times'', proving that he knew the future, and that Peter had no free will.
If you believe the bible.
It's certain futures. You keep contradicting your own posts.
And if in another future Peter didn't, then in that case, Jesus got it wrong. Not very godlike.
I'm not defending the god concept, I'm refuting your illogic and unreason with reason and logic with respect to your claim that the biblical nature of the Christian God denies the existence of free will. I have demonstrated that this is not necessarily so, thus refuting your claim.mistermack wrote:Yeh, it's a bit telling that even Seth needs the most extreme of multiverse theories to try to defend the god concept.Xamonas Chegwé wrote: Or maybe the whole scenario never happened and it was all invented by someone that wrote down a bunch of garbled, oral legends a couple of hundred years after they were supposed to have happened. Nah! That's just too far-fetched compared to a god that dwells in all possible multiverses at once...
And a bollocks version of it, to boot.
I see you concede that you've lost the debate. Thanks. Better luck next time.mistermack wrote:![]()
I just got a message from another universe.
The same identical Seth just agreed that I was right and there was no such thing as free will if there is a god, in one of the multiverses.
![]()
![]()
Shame we're stuck with the
You can never expect to ''win'' a debate with a troll. They are their own referees.Seth wrote:I see you concede that you've lost the debate. Thanks. Better luck next time.mistermack wrote:![]()
I just got a message from another universe.
The same identical Seth just agreed that I was right and there was no such thing as free will if there is a god, in one of the multiverses.
![]()
![]()
Shame we're stuck with the
Poor attempt. You still lose.mistermack wrote:You can never expect to ''win'' a debate with a troll. They are their own referees.Seth wrote:I see you concede that you've lost the debate. Thanks. Better luck next time.mistermack wrote:![]()
I just got a message from another universe.
The same identical Seth just agreed that I was right and there was no such thing as free will if there is a god, in one of the multiverses.
![]()
![]()
Shame we're stuck with the
I just like to see how stupid your twists and turns can become.
This was a good one.
Seth wrote: Poor attempt. You still lose.
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