Is the Right Question: How Much Choice Do We Have?
One thing that spawns error is binary thinking:
like a thing must be so vs not so, or hot vs cold.
Should this question be reframed:
"How much free will does a man have?"
or
"How free is the will of man?"
Actually the term "will," so far as I know, in the Bible never occurs in the sense of a faculty, as if to say, "I have a thing called a 'will.'" And with my will I will.
The Greek work thelēma exists. The -ma suffix as a rule means result or object of an action. Thus one says, "I it my will that I eat pork chops." In other words, this will is what you want to do or intend to do, not a faculty.
One thing that spawns error is binary thinking:
like a thing must be so vs not so, or hot vs cold.
Should this question be reframed:
"How much free will does a man have?"
or
"How free is the will of man?"
Actually the term "will," so far as I know, in the Bible never occurs in the sense of a faculty, as if to say, "I have a thing called a 'will.'" And with my will I will.
The Greek work thelēma exists. The -ma suffix as a rule means result or object of an action. Thus one says, "I it my will that I eat pork chops." In other words, this will is what you want to do or intend to do, not a faculty.