TITLE:
Is Human Freedom Compatible with Divine Foreknowledge?
AUTHORS:
Dean Lubin
KEYWORDS:
Human Freedom, Divine Foreknowledge, Compatibility, Accidental Necessity
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Philosophy,
Vol.11 No.4,
November
30,
2021
ABSTRACT: If God is omniscient and exhaustive knowledge of the
future is possible, then God knows (and in fact knew a long time ago) what we
will do in the future. But is this compatible with our future actions being
free? I address this question by responding to an argument that claims that these things are incompatible. At the
heart of this incompatibility argument is the idea that God’s past beliefs about
our future actions are “accidentally necessary”—can’t be changed—and that this necessity transfers to our actions. I
consider four main responses to the argument: Brian Davies’ claim that God’s
past beliefs about our future actions are properly characterised as beliefs
about what we will freely do; Alvin
Plantinga’s view—stemming from the work of William of Ockham—that God’s past beliefs
about our future actions aren’t wholly about the past and so aren’t
accidentally necessary; Trenton Merricks’ idea that our having a choice about
God’s past beliefs doesn’t require us to be able to change the past; and Alfred
Freddoso’s claim that the accidental necessity of God’s beliefs doesn’t transfer to our actions. My response, like that of
Merricks, focuses on the idea that God’s past beliefs are dependent on, and to
be explained in terms of, our future
actions; rather than vice versa. I support this view by appealing to the idea
that God’s foreknowledge is simple (an idea I defend against several William
Hasker—inspired objections). I
argue that neither God’s beliefs, nor their accidental necessity, should be
thought of as a threat to our freedom; and that in any event, the accidental necessity of God’s beliefs isn’t
something that can coherently be thought to transfer to our actions. I conclude
that God’s past beliefs about our future actions are perfectly compatible with
our freedom.