A Handful of Anti-Molinist Arguments
Steve Hays recently launched a series of anti-Molinism arguments,
mostly in response to William Lane Craig’s defense of Molinism here.
Steve’s
first criticism of Molinism is to call it fate and fatalistic, because in
Molinism God does not decide what we would freely do in various
circumstances. (link) Steve
doesn’t explain why this qualifies as fatalism.
Was the Cowboys selection of Tryon Smith fatalistic just because the
first eight players were off the board?
No, just because you don’t decide everything does not mean you cannot
decide anything or that the outcome of what you do choose is inevitable. While God does not determine what we would
choose in various circumstances, He does decide the circumstances. Steve is confusing the inability to determine
everything with the inability to determine anything.
Steve’s second criticism of Molinsim is that “So not only must God
play the hand he’s been dealt, but he was dealt that hand from a fictitious
deck by a fictitious dealer!” (link)
Steve basis this argument on
Craig’s statements that “the
counterfactuals of creaturely freedom which confront Him are outside His control.
He has to play with the hand He has been dealt” and on Craig’s denial that
abstract objects, like numbers, exist. But
counterfactuals of freedom are not abstract objects like numbers. Imagine God has a hypothetical simulator
machine and keeps it in your basement.
He puts hypothetical people in it and it spits out scenarios. The idea of the simulator machine or the idea
of its output, the scenarios, may be abstract objects like numbers, but the
machine is not. It’s sitting in your
basement. Steve is confusing God’s
thoughts and ability to hypothesize with the concepts of God’s thoughts and
ability to hypothesize.
Steve’s third criticism
of Molinism is that it’s incoherent to talk about what a person would do if we
assume they had a radically different past and were in completely different
circumstances, like JFK being born in medieval Tibet. This assumes there is nothing more to us than
our nature, genetics and circumstances.
It’s like we could have an identity swap with another person, so long as
that other person had our genetics, memories and upbringing. But the bible does talk about what people
would do if they had been born in another time, like the Pharisees in Christ
time would have killed the OT prophets (Matthew 23:29-32) or what Christ’s
servants would do if His kingdom had been of this world (John 18:36). Such statements are not incoherent, in part
because there is such a thing as “us”, over and above our circumstances and
genetics.
Steve’s fourth criticism
of Molinism is that God’s not determining what we would choose in every setting
conflicts with His omnipotence. Steve even
compares William Lane Craig to a Rabbi who’s rejected by Orthodox Jews and
popular among Mormans for denying omnipotence.
(link) The comparison is uncalled for and would be
like comparing Calvinists to Hindus with an evil god. Probably Steve’s argument would look
something like God cannot create a rock so big He cannot lift it because the
idea of a rock so big God cannot lift is logically impossible. There’s no such rock, and similarly there’s
no such thing as libertarian free will. But if LFW is impossible, God does not
have LFW, as Plantinga points out (see Theism and Persons within Advice to
Christian Philosophers (link)).
But perhaps Steve is a uniwiller; holding it’s impossible for more than one libertarian
free will to exist. If so, he should
present his argument and meanwhile here’s a decent Molinist account of
omnipotence by Flint and Freddoso (link).
Comments
I don't see a follow wedgit on this blog so I could follow you in return and I'd like to do so.
God be with you,
Dan
Molinism reconciles God's providential control of the world with man's free will by saying God knows what we would choose in any setting. One of the best introductions to Molinism is Kenneth Ketherly's book called Sovereignty and Salvation. Last I checked the online wilki article was good as well. Of course anything by William Lane Craig is good as well but a bit advanced.
God be with you,
Dan
God be with you,
Dan
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