Friday, April 29, 2016

Free Will, Predestination and Necessity

Jehovah foresees that certain events will happen or God knows that He will bring about particular occurrences in history. He therefore announces these events in His Word (the Bible), thereby binding Himself to the fulfillment of such prophesied events (Isa. 55:10-11). If God foresees the future acts of volitional agents, then it seems they will necessarily happen, but these acts are supposed to take place within the parameters of creaturely freedom. We cannot rightly infer that God necessarily causes that which He foresees. For example, God does not cause the rebels mentioned in Rev. 20:8 to rebel--yet they willexercise their free volition and rebel against God according to the prophecy.

Boethius provides a way out of this apparent dilemma by employing Aristotle's distinction between simple and conditional (hypothetical) necessity. De Consolatione Philosophiae (Book V) uses the example: "Necessarily, all men are mortal." This proposition is an example of simple necessity, which issues from a thing ut natura. On the other hand, knowing that if S is walking, then it is necessary that S is walking is an example of hypothetical necessity. We could also say: "If Socrates is sitting, then it is necessary that he is sitting." Yet it would not be correct to infer from this proposition: "Necessarily, Socrates is sitting." See Aristotle, Physics 2.9.

Theologians call the distinctions made above de re and de dicto modalities: what is true de re might not be true de dicto and vice versa. "Necessarily, Socrates is sitting" is a de re utterance (modality) but "If Socrates is sitting, then it is necessary that he is sitting" is de dicto. Everything depends on what the modal operator modifies or which utterances fall within the scope of the modal operator.

Applying this example to Cyrus the Great, we can say that there is a difference between the proposition: "It is necessary that Cyrus the Great will overthrow Babylon" and "If Cyrus overthrows Babylon, then he will necessarily overthrow Babylon."

Boethius writes: "Without doubt, then, all things which God foreknows do come to pass, but certain of them proceed from free will."

I obviously disagree with Boethius in a number of ways, but the Aristotelian distinction between simple and hypothetical necessity might be helpful for understanding how events necessarily happen without implying fatalism.

5 comments:

  1. Just looking at jonah 3:1,2 lxx. What exactly was the proclamation and where was it made?

    V 10 κακία η ελάλησε του ποιήσαι αυτοίς

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  2. Jonah was originally called by Jehovah in 1:1-2, I think. The message was not initially specific, but the implication was that Jonah should let the people of Nineveh know that their ways were not pleasing to God (1:2). After Jonah was cast upon dry land by the great fish, he was told to speak the former message, but we are not told specifically what that entailed. 3:3 states that he arose "and went to Nineveh" as Jehovah had commanded him to do. See also 3:4-5.

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  3. It,s just that the lxx of 3:2 gives the impression that the objectives were stated at the outset. If this is an addition of the translator then it seems a little odd.

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  4. 4Q76, ... Frg. 22 is closer to the idea of LXX, but not
    identical to it.


    4Q76 reads:
    the proclamation *like* the one that I spoke

    http://faculty.washington.edu/garmar/AnglesonJonah.pdf

    https://www.academia.edu/4018527/Hellenistic_Jonah

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  5. See also https://jacobcerone.com/2013/04/29/septuagint-jonah-11-3-and-31-3-compared/

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