This is from William Lane Craig’s Forum, but (as most universalists are determinists, or compatilibsts who deny libertarian freewill) I think it’s relevant here (and I’d be interested in your responses.)
If God is good by nature, could He (indeterministically, for no reason) suddenly decide to be evil?
I’ve always been a compatibalist, and I confess I don’t really understand what those who say they believe in libertarian freewill really mean by the term (i.e. free to chose something for no reason, without any predisposition?), but I’ve seen convincing arguments against the concept, and the basic argument is the same one used for the existence of God–i.e. there has to be a cause for an effect.
If you choose chicken over steak, it’s either because you like chicken better than steak, or because you think it’s better for you.
But if you have two plates of chicken at perfectly equal distances from you, you are neither left handed or right handed, left brained or right brained, and there is absolutely no reason for you to choose one over the other (and no higher power to help you out before you starve to death), how could you ever make a choice?
If all things were truly equal, it would seem logical that you would starve to death, with your will caught between two equally good choices.
It’s been said (even by great Theologians like C.S. Lewis) that God can not do the logically impossible (like make a four sided circle, or create an object so heavy even He can’t lift it), so, if we apply that logic to God, how could any of His actions be truly arbitrary and purposeless?
But some things in the universe do seem that way, don’t they?
When I was a kid they said there were nine planets in the solar system, then they said eight, now they say there may be nine again (with a gas giant beyond Pluto), but what difference could it possibly make?
Wouldn’t the choice of eight, or nine, or seven, or ten be purely arbitrary?
And if there are things in the universe that are wholly arbitrary (determined not by God’s nature or purpose), wouldn’t He have to have libertarian freewill to choose between these equally desirable alternatives?
I’m just thinking out loud here, and I would appreciate other thoughts.
Thank you.
I’m sure most of you here are compatibilists, do you have any thoughts on this?
Is it philosophically inconsistent to deny the existence of libertarian freewill without also denying the existence of God?