Abstract

In the book “Freedom of the Will”, Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758) put forward a strong ar-gument for theological fatalism. This argument, I suppose, can be considered as the universal basis for discussion between Fatalists and Anti-Fatalists in the 20th century, especially in the context of the most powerful argument for fatalism, introduced by Nelson Pike. The argument of Edwards rests upon the following principles: (a) if something has been the case in the past, it has been the case necessarily (Necessity of the past); (b) if God knows something (say A), it is not the case that ~A is possible (Infallibility of God`s knowledge). Hence, Edwards infers that if God had foreknowledge that A, then A is necessary, and it is not the case that someone could voluntarily choose ~A. The article argues that (i) the Edwards` inference Kgp → □p rests upon the modal fallacy; (ii) the inference „God had a knowledge that p will happen, therefore „God had a knowledge that p will happen” is the proposition about the past, and hence, the necessarily true proposition“ is ambiguous; thus, it is not the case that this proposition necessarily entails the impossibility of ~p; (iii) it is not the case that p, being known by God, turns out to be necessary. Thus, we can avoid the inference of Edwards that if Kgp is a fact of the past, then we cannot freely choose ~p. It has also been shown that the main provisions of the argument of Edwards remain significant in the context of contemporary debates about free will and foreknowledge (Theories of soft facts, Anti-Ockhamism, theories of temporal modal asymmetry, „Timeless solution”). Additionally, I introduce a new challenge for fatalism – argument from Brouwerian axiom.

Highlights

  • Suppose that God 2000 years ago had a foreknowledge that I will write today an article about Gods foreknowledge

  • (3) If Gods foreknowledge that I will write today an article about Gods foreknowledge is a necessary truth, it follows from Gods foreknowledge that I will write the article necessarily

  • The argument of Edwards determines indirectly the content of discussions between fatalists and the advocates of free will in the 20th and 21st centuries. The core of this argument is the principle of closure and necessity of the past

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Summary

Introduction

Suppose that God 2000 years ago had a foreknowledge that I will write today an article about Gods foreknowledge. (3) If Gods foreknowledge that I will write today an article about Gods foreknowledge is a necessary truth, it follows from Gods foreknowledge that I will write the article necessarily (by the principle that what follows from the necessarily true proposition is itself a necessarily true proposition) Call this principle Necessity Entailment (4) The divine foreknowledge exists. The truth of the statement that it is necessarily the case that I am writing an article about Gods foreknowledge in the year 2020, by (3), is true not in virtue of empirical observation (i.e., in virtue of the fact that I am writing this article), but because this proposition is logically entailed by the necessary proposition that God had a foreknowledge 2000 years ago. It is not the case that I can refrain from writing the article

Edwards on the Incompatibility of Divine Foreknowledge and Human Free Will
Divine Foreknowledge and Modal Fallacy
Conclusion

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