Saturday, August 23, 2025

Gaze dualism and omnisubjectivity

I have toyed with a pair of theories.

The first is what I call gaze-dualism. On gaze-dualism, our sensory conscious experiences are constituted by a non-physical object—the soul—“gazing” at certain brain states. When the sensory data changes—say, when a sound goes from middle A to middle C—the subjective experience changes. But this change need not involve an intrinsic change in the soul. The change in experience is grounded in a change in the gazed-at brain state, a brain state that reflects the sensory data, rather than by a change in the gazing soul. (This is perhaps very close to Aquinas’ view of sensory consciousness, except that for Aquinas the gazed-at states are states of sense organs rather than of the brain.)

The second is an application of this to God’s knowledge of contingent reality. God knows contingent reality by gazing at it the way that our soul gazes at the brain states that reflect sensory data. God does not intrinsically change when contingent reality changes—the change is all on the side of the gazed-at contingent reality.

I just realized that this story makes a bit of progress on what Linda Zagzebski calls “omnisubjectivity”—God’s knowledge of all subjective states. My experience of hearing a middle C comes from my gazing at a brain state BC of my auditory center produced by nerve impulses caused by my tympanic membrane vibrating at 256 Hz. My gaze is limited to certain aspects of my auditory center—my gaze tracks whatever features of my auditory center are relevant to the sound, features denoted by BC, but does not track features of my auditory center that are not relevant to the sound (e.g., the temperature of my neurons). God’s gaze is not so limited—God gazes at every aspect of my auditory center. But in doing so, he also gazes at BC. This does not mean that God has the same experience as I do. My experience is partly constituted by my soul’s gaze at BC. God’s experience is partly constituted by God’s gaze at BC. Since my soul is very different from God, it is not surprising that the experiences are different. However, God has full knowledge of the constituents of my experience: myself, my gaze, and BC, and God’s knowledge of these is basically experiential—it is constituted by God’s gazing at me, my gaze, and BC. And God also gazes at their totality. This is, I think, all we need to be able to say that God knows my sensory consciousness states.

My non-sensory experiences may also be constituted by my soul’s gazing at a state of my brain, but they may also be constituted by the soul’s gazing at a state of the soul. And God gazes at the constituents and whole again.

Diversity of inner lives

There is a vast and rather radical diversity in the inner conscious lives of human beings. Start with the differences in dreams: some people know immediately whether they are dreaming and others do not; some are in control of their dreams and others are not; some dream in color and others do not. Now move on to the differences in thought. Some think in pictures, some in words with sounds, some in a combination of words with sounds and written words, and some without any visual or aural imagery. Some people are completely unable to imagine things in pictures, others can do so only in a shadowy and unstable way, and yet others can do so in detail. Even in the case of close friends, we often have no idea about how they differ in these respects, and to many people the diversity in inner conscious lives comes as a surprise, as they assume that almost everyone is like them.

But in their outer behavior, including linguistic behavior, people seem much more homogeneous. They say “I think that tomorrow is a good day for our bike trip” regardless of whether they thought it out in pictures, in sounds, or in some other way. They give arguments as a sequence of logically connected sentences. Their desires, while differing from person to person, are largely comprehensible and not very surprising. People are more homogeneous outside than inside.

This contrast between inner heterogeneity and outward homogeneity is something I realized yesterday while participating in a workshop on Linda Zagzebski’s manuscript on dreams. I am not quite sure what to make of this contrast philosophically, but it seems really interesting. We flatten our inner lives to present them to people in our behavior, but we also don’t feel like much is lost in this flattening. It doesn’t really matter much whether our thoughts come along with sights or sounds. It would not be surprising if there were differences in skill levels that correlated with the characteristics of inner life—it would not be surprising if people who thought more in pictures were better at low-dimensional topology—but these differences are not radical.

Many of us as children have wondered whether other people’s conscious experiences are the same as ours—does red look the same (bracketing colorblindness) and does a middle C sinewave sound the same (bracketing hearing deficiencies)? I have for a while thought it not unlikely that the answer is negative, because I am attracted to the idea that central to how things look to us are the relationships between different experiences, and different people have sets of experiences. (Compare the visual field reversal experiments, where people who wear visual field reversal glasses initially see things upside-down but then it turns right-side-up, which suggests to me that the directionality of the visual field is constituted by relationships between different experiences rather than being something intrinsic.) I think the vast diversity in conscious but non-sensory inner lives gives us some reason to think that sensory consciousness also differs quite a bit between people—and gets flattened and homogenized into words, much as thoughts are.

Friday, August 8, 2025

Extrinsic well-being and the open future

Klaus: Sometimes how well or badly off you are at time t1 depends on what happens at a later time t2. A particularly compelling case of this is when at t1 you performedan onerous action with the goal of producing some effect E at t2. How well off you were in performing the action depends on whether the action succeeded—which depends on whether E eventuates at t2. But now suppose the future is open. Then in a world with as much indeterminacy as ours, in many cases at t1 it will be contingent whether the event at t2 on which your well-being at t1 depends eventuates. And on open future views, at t1 there will then be no fact of the matter about your well-being. Hence, the future is not open.

Opie: In such cases, your well-being should be located at t2 rather than at t1. If you jump the crevasse, it is only when you land that you have the well-being of success.

Klaus: This does not work as well in cases where you are dead at t2. And yet our well-being does sometimes depend on what happens after we are dead. The action at t1 might be a heroic sacrifice of one’s life to save one’s friends—but whether one is a successful hero or a tragic hero depends on whether the friends will be saved, which may depend on what happens after one is already dead.

Opie: Thanks! You just gave me an argument for an afterlife. In cases like this, you are obviously better off if you manage to save your friends, but you aren’t better off in this life, so there must be life after death.

Klaus: But we also have the intuition that even if there were no afterlife, it would be better to be the successful hero than the tragic hero, and that posthumous fame is better than posthumous infamy.

Opie: There is an afterlife. You’ve convinced me. And moral intuitions about how things would be if our existence had a radically different shape from the one it in fact has are suspect. And, given that there is an afterlife, a scenario without an afterlife is a scenario where our existence has a radically different shape. Thus the intuition you cite is unreliable.

Klaus: That’s a good response. Let me try a different case. Suppose you perform an onerous action with a goal within this life, but then you change your mind about the goal and work to prevent that goal. This works best if both goals are morally acceptable, and switching goals is acceptable. For instance you initially worked to help the Niners train to win their baseball game against the Logicians, but then your allegiance shifted to the Logicians in a way that isn't morally questionable. And then suppose the Niners won. Your actions in favor of the Niners are successful, and you have well-being. But it is incorrect to locate that well-being at the time of the actual victory, since at that time you are working for the Logicians, not the Niners. So the well-being must be located at the time of your activity, and at that time it depends on future contingents.

Opie: Perhaps I should say that at the time Niners beat the Logicians, you are both well-off and badly-off, since one of your past goals is successful and the other is unsuccessful. But I agree that this doesn’t quite seem right. After all, if you are loyal to your current employer, you’re bummed out about the Logicians’ loss and you’re bummed out that you weren’t working for them from the beginning. So intuitively you're just badly off at this time, not both badly and well off. So, I admit, this is a little bit of evidence against open future views.

Consciousness and the open future

Plausibly:

  1. There is a “minimal humanly observable duration” (mhod) such that a human cannot have a conscious state—say, a pain—shorter than an mhod, but can have a conscious state that’s an mhod long.

The “cannot” here is nomic possibility rather than metaphysical possibility.

Let δ denote an mhod. Now, suppose that you feel a pain precisely from t0 to t2. Then t2 ≥ t0 + δ. Now, let t1 = t0 + δ/2. Then you feel a pain at t1. But at t1, you only felt a pain for half an mhod. Thus:

  1. At t1, that you feel pain depends on substantive facts about your mental state at times after t1.

For if your head were suddenly zapped by a giant laser a quarter of an mhod after t1, then you would not have felt a pain at t1, because you would have been in a position to feel pain only from t0 to t0 + (3/4)δ.

But in a universe full of quantum indeterminacy:

  1. These substantive facts are contingent.

After all, your brain could just fail a quarter of an mhod after t1 due to a random quantum event.

But:

  1. Given an open future, at t1 there are no substantive contingent facts about the future.

Thus:

  1. Given an open future, at t1 there is no fact that you are conscious.

Which is absurd!

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Discrete time and Aristotle's argument for an infinite past

Aristotle had a famous argument that time had no beginning or end. In the case of beginnings, this argument caused immense philosophical suffering in the middle ages, since combined with the idea that time requires change it implies that the universe was eternal, contrary to the Jewish, Muslim and Christian that God created the universe a finite amount of time ago.

The argument is a reductio ad absurdum and can be put for instance like this:

  1. Suppose t0 is the beginning of time.

  2. Before t0 there is no time.

  3. It is a contradiction to talk of what happened before the the beginning of time.

  4. But if (1) is true, then (2) talks of what is before the beginning of time.

  5. Contradiction!

It’s pretty easy to see what’s wrong with the argument. Claim (2) should be charitably read as:

  • Not (before t0 there is time).

Seen that way, (2) doesn’t talk about what happened before t0, but is just a denial that there was any such thing as time-before-t0.

It just struck me that a similar argument could be used to establish something that Aristotle himself rejects. Aristotle famously believed that time was discrete. But now argue:

  1. Suppose t0 and t1 are two successive instants of time.

  2. After t0 and before t1 there is no time.

  3. It is a contradiction of what happened when there is no time.

  4. But if (7) is true, then (7) talks of what is when there is no time.

  5. Contradiction!

Again, the problem is the same. We should take (7) to deny that there is any such thing as time-after-t0-and-before-t1.

So Aristotle needed to choose between his preference for the discreteness of time and his argument for an infinite past.

What if there is no tomorrow?

There are two parts of Aristotle’s theory that are hard to fit together.

First, we have Aristotle’s view of future contingents, on which

  1. It is neither true nor false that tomorrow there will be a sea battle

but, of course:

  1. It is true that tomorrow there will be a sea battle or no sea battle.

Of course, nothing rides on “tomorrow” in (1) and (2): any future metric interval of times will do. Thus:

  1. It is true that in 86,400,000 milliseconds there will be a sea battle or not.

(Here I adopt the convention that “in x units” denotes the interval of time corresponding to the displayed number of significant digits in x. Thus, “in 86,400,000 ms” means “at a time between 86,399,999.5 (inclusive) and 86,400,000.5 (exclusive) ms from now.”)

Second, we have Aristotle’s view of time, on which time is infinitely divisible but not infinitely divided. Times correspond to what one might call happenings, the beginnings and ends of processes of change. Now which happenings there will be, and when they will fall with respect to metric time (say, 3.74 seconds after some other happening), is presumably something that is, or can be, contingent.

In particular, in a world full of contingency and with slow-moving processes of change, it is contingent whether there will be a time in 86,400,000 ms. But (3) entails that there will be such a time, since if there is no such time, then it is not true that anything will be the case in 86,400,000 ms, since there will be no such time.

Thus, Aristotle cannot uphold (3) in a world full of contingency and slow processes. Hence, (3) cannot be a matter of temporal logic, and thus neither can (2) be, since logic doesn’t care about the difference between days and milliseconds.

If we want to make the point in our world, we would need units smaller than milliseconds. Maybe Planck times will work.

Objection: Suppose that no moment of time will occur in exactly x1 seconds, because x1 falls between all the endpoints of processes of change. But perhaps we can still say what is happening in x1 seconds. Thus, if there are x0 < x1 < x2 such that x0 seconds from now and x2 seconds from now (imagine all this paragraph being said in one moment!) are both real moments of time, we can say things about what will happen in x1 seconds. If I will be sitting in both x0 and x2 seconds, maybe I can say that I will be sitting in x1 seconds. Similarly, if Themistocles is leading a sea battle in 86,399,999 ms and is leading a sea battle in 86,400,001 ms, then we can say that he is leading a sea battle in 86,400,000 ms, even though there is no moment of time then. And if he won’t lead a sea battle in either 86,399,999 ms or in 86,400,000 ms, neither will he lead one in 86,400,000 ms.

Response: Yes, but (3) is supposed to be true as a matter of logic. And it’s logically possible that Themistocles leads a sea battle in 86,399,999 ms but not in 86,400,001 ms, in which case if there will be no moment in 86,400,000 ms, we cannot meaningfully say if he will be leading a sea battle then or not. So we cannot save (3) as a matter of logic.

A possible solution: Perhaps Aristotle should just replace (2) with:

  1. It is true that will be: no tomorrow or tomorrow a sea battle or tomorrow no sea battle.

I am a bit worried about the "will" attached to a “no tomorrow”. Maybe more on that later.

Monday, July 28, 2025

An attempt to define possible futures for open futurism

On all-false open future (AFOF), future contingent claims are all false. The standard way to define “Will p” is to say that p is true in all possible futures. But defining a possible future is difficult. Patrick Todd does it in terms of possible worlds apparantly of the classical sort—ones that have well-defined facts about how things are at all times. But such worlds are not in general possible given open future views—it is not possible to simultaneously have a fact about how contingent events go on all future days (assuming the future is infinite).

Here is an approach that maybe has some hope of working better for open future views. Take as primitive not classical possible worlds, but possible moments, ways that things could be purely at a time. Possible moments do not include facts about the past and future.

Now put a temporal ordering on the possible moments, where we say that m1 is earlier than m2 provided that it is possible to have had m1 obtaining before m2.

For a possible moment m, define:

  • open m-world: a maximal set of possible moments including m such that (a) all moments in the set other than m are earlier or later than m and (b) the subset of moments earlier than m is totally ordered

  • possible history: a maximal totally ordered set of possible moments

  • possible future: a possible history that contains m.

Exactly one possible moment is currently actual. Then:

  • possible future: a possible future of the currently actual moment.

Now consider the problem of entailment on AFOF. The problem is this. Intutiively, that I will freely mow my lawn entails that I will mow my lawn, but does not entail that I will eat my lawn. However, since on AFOF “I will freely mow my lawn” is necessarily false—it is false at every possible moment, since “will” claims concerning future contingent claims are always false—both entailments have necessarily false antecedents and hence are trivially true.

Given a set S of moments and a moment m ∈ S, any sentence of Prior’s (or Brand’s) temporal logic can be evaluated for truth at (S,m). We can now define two modalities:

  • p is OW-necessary: p is true at (W,m) for every open m-world W

  • p is PH-necessary: p is true at (H,m) for every possible history H that contains m.

And now we have two entailments: p OW/PH-entails q if and only if the material conditional p → q is OW/PH-necessary.

Then that I will freely mow my lawn is OW-impossible, but PH-possible, and that I will freely mow my lawn OW-entails that I will eat my lawn, but does not PH-entail it. The open futurist can now say that our intuitive concept of entailment, in temporal contexts, corresponds to PH-entailment rather than OW-entailment.

I think this is helpful to the open futurist, but still has a serious problem. Consider the sentence “I will mow or I will not-mow.” On AFOF, this is false. But it is true at every possible history. Hence, it is PH-necessary. Thus, PH-necessity does not satisfy the T-axiom. Thus PH-entailment is such that a truth can PH-entail a falsehood. For instance, since “I will mow or I will not-mow” is PH-necessary, it is PH-entailed by every tautology.

On trivalent logics, if "I will mow or I will not-mow" is neither true nor false, we have a similar problem: a truth PH-entails a non-truth.

There are is a more technical problem on some metaphysical views. Suppose that it is contingent whether time continues past a certain moment. For instance, suppose there is no God and empty time is impossible, and there is a particle which can indeterministically cease to exist, and the world contains just that particle, so at any time it is possible that time is the last—the particle can pop out of existence. Oddly, because of the maximality condition on possible histories, there is no possible future where the particle pops out of existence.

I wonder if there is a better way to define entailment and possible futures that works with open future views.

Wednesday, July 23, 2025

Aristotelianism and transformative technology

The Aristotelian picture of us is that like other organisms, we flourish in fulfilling our nature. Our nature specifies the proper way of interacting with the world. We do not expect an organism’s nature to specify proper ways of interacting with scenarios far from its niche: how bats should fly in weightless conditions; how cats should feed in an environment with unlimited food supply; how tardigrades should live on the moon.

But with technology, we have shifted far from the environment we evolved for. While adaptability is a part of our nature, some technological innovations seem to go beyond the adaptability we expect, in that they appear to impact central aspects of the life of the social beings we are: innovations like the city, writing, and fast and widely accessible global communication. We should not expect for our nature specify how we should behave with respect to these new social technologies. We should have a skepticism that our nature contains sensible answers to questions about how we should behave in these cases.

Thus we appear to have an Aristotelian argument for avoiding the more transformative types of technology, since we are more likely to have meaningful answers to questions about how to lead our lives if our lives are less affected by social transformations. To be on the safe side, we should live in the country, and have most of our social interaction with a relatively small number of neighbors in person.

The theistic Aristotelian, however, has an answer to this. While evolution cannot foresee the Internet, God can, and he can give us a normative nature that specifies how we should adapt to vast changes in the shape of our lives. We do not need to avoid transformative technology in general, though of course we must be careful lest the transformation be for ill.

Friday, July 18, 2025

Optimalism and logical possibility

Optimalism holds that, of metaphysical necessity, the best world is actualized.

There are two ways to understand “the best world”: (1) the best of all metaphysically possible worlds and (2) the best of all (narrowly) logically possible worlds.

If we understand it in sense (1), then the best world is the best out of a class of one, and hence it’s also the worst world in the same class. So on reading (1), optimalism=pessimalism.

So sense (2) seems to be a better choice. But here is an argument against (2). It seems to be an a posteriori truth that I am living life LAP (the life in our world associated with the name “Alexander Pruss”) and that Napoleon is living life LNB (the life in our world associated with the name “Napoleon Bonaparte”). There seems to be a narrowly logically possible world just like this one where I live LNB and Napoleon lives LAP. That world with me and Napoleon swapped is neither better nor worse than this one. Hence our world is not the best one. It is tied or incommensurable with a whole bunch of worlds where the identities of individuals are permuted.

Maybe my identity is logically tied to certain aspects of my life, though? Leibniz certainly thought so—he thought it was tied to all the aspects of my life. But this is a controversial view.

Thursday, July 17, 2025

All-false open futurism

On All-False Open Futurism (AFOF), any future tensed statement about a future contingent must be false. It is false that there will be a sea battle tomorrow, for instance.

Suppose now I realize that due to a bug, tomorrow I will be able to transfer ten million dollars from a client’s account to mine, and then retire to a country that won’t extradite me. A little angel says to me:

  1. Your freely taking your client’s money without permission tomorrow entails your being a thief tomorrow.

I don’t want to be a thief, tomorrow or ever, so I am about to decide not to do it. But now a little devil convinces me of AFOF and says that while (1) is true, so is:

  1. Your freely taking your client’s money without permission tomorrow entails your being a saint tomorrow.

Perhaps I am not very good at modal logic and the devil needs to explain. Given AFOF, it is necessarily false that I will freely take my client’s money without permission tomorrow, and a necessary falsehood entails everything. So, the devil adds, I might as well buy my plane tickets now.

The angel, however, grants AFOF for the sake of argument, but says that notwithstanding (2), the following holds:

  1. Tomorrow it will be the case your taking your client’s money without permission entails your being a thief.

For the entailment holds always.

At this point, we have an interesting question. Given AFOF, should I guide my actions by the entailment between future-tensed claims in (2) or by the future-tensed entailment claim in (3)? The angel urges that the devil’s reasoning undercuts all rationality, while the angel’s reasoning does not, and hence is superior.

But the devil has one more trick up his sleeve. He notes that it is a contingent question whether there will be a tomorrow at all. For God might freely decide to end time before tomorrow. Thus, that there will be a tomorrow is false on AFOF. But (3) implies that there will be a tomorrow, and so (3) is false as well. I try to argue on the basis of Scripture that God has made promises that entail a future eternity, but the devil is a lot better at citing the Bible than I, and convinces me that God might transfer us to a timeless state or maybe eternal life is a supertask lasting from 8 to 9 pm tonight. And in any case, surely it should not depend on revelation whether the angel has a good argument not to take the client’s money. This is a problem for AFOF.

Maybe this is the way out. The angel could say this:

  1. Necessarily, if there will be a tomorrow, then it will be true tomorrow that taking your client’s money without permission entails your being a thief.

But while this conditional is true on AFOF, if the devil has made his case that God hasn’t promised there will be a tomorrow, he can respond with:

  1. Necessarily, if God hasn’t promised there will be a tomorrow and there will be a tomorrow, then it will be true tomorrow that taking your client’s money without permission entails your being a saint.

For the antecedent of the conditional here is necessarily false on AFOF, it being contingent that there will be a tomorrow absent a divine promise. And it seems that (5) is even more relevant to guiding action than (4), then.

Maybe the defender of AFOF can insist that the future must be infinite. But this does not seem plausible.

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Yet another counterexample to act utilitarianism

It is wrong to torture a stranger for 99 minutes in order to avoid 100 minutes of equal torture to oneself.

Entailment and Open Future views

This is probably an old thing that has been discussed to death, but I only now noticed it. Suppose an open future view on which future contingents cannot have truth value. What happens to entailments? We want to say:

  1. That Jones will freely mow the lawn tomorrow entails that he will mow the lawn tomorrow

and to deny:

  1. That Jones will freely mow the lawn tomorrow entails that he will not mow the lawn tomorrow.

Now, a plausible view of entailment is that:

  1. p entails q if and only if it is impossible for p to be true while q is false.

But if future contingents cannot have truth value, then that Jones will freely mow the lawn tomorrow cannot be true, and hence by (3) it entails everything. In particular, both (1) and (2) will be true.

Presumably, the open futurist who believes future contingents cannot have truth value will give a different account of entailment, such as:

  1. p entails q if and only if there is no history in which p is true and q is false.

But what is a history? Here is a possible story. For a time t, let a t-possibility be a maximal set of propositions that could all be true together at t. Given the open future view we are exploring, a t-possibility will not include any propositions reporting contingent events after t. If t1 < t2, and A1 is a t1-possibility while A2 is a t2-possibility, we can say that A1 is included in A2 provided that for any proposition p in A1, the proposition that p was true at t1 is a member of A2. We can then say that a history h is a function that assigns a t-possibility h(t) to every time t such that h(t1) is included in h(t2) whenever t1 < t2.

(Technical note: Open theism implies a theory of tensed propositions, I assume. Thus if A is a t1-possibility, then it is not a t2-possibility if t2 ≠ t1, since any t-possibility will include the proposition that t is present.)

But what does it mean to say that a proposition p is true in a history h. Here is a plausible approach. Suppose t0 is the present time. Given a proposition p that says that s, let pt0 be the backdated proposition that at t0 it was such that s (with whatever shifts of tense are needed in s to make this grammatical). Then p is true in h provided that there is a time t1 > t0 such that pt0 is a member of h(t1). In other words, a proposition p is true in h provided that eventually h settles its truth value.

This works nicely for letting us affirm (1) and deny (2). In every history in which it becomes true that Jones will freely mow the lawn it becomes true that Jones will mow the lawn, while this is not so if we replace the consequent with “Jones will not mow the lawn.” But what about statements that quantify over times? Consider:

  1. Jones will mow the lawn, and for every time t at which Jones will mow the lawn, there will be a time t′ that is more than a year after t such that Jones will freely mow the lawn at t.

This entails:

  1. Jones will mow the lawn, and for every time t at which Jones will mow the lawn, there will be a time t′ that is more than a year after t such that Jones will mow the lawn at t.

but does not entail:

  1. Jones will not mow the lawn.

But there is no history h at which (5) is true by the above account of truth-at-a-history given our open future view. For let t0 be the present and let p be the proposition expressed by (5). Then at any future time t and any history h, the proposition pt0 is not a member of h(t). For if it were a member of h(t), it would be affirming the existence of an infinite number of future free mowings, and such a proposition cannot be true on our open future view. Since there is no history h at which (5) is true, by (4) we have it that (5) entails both (6) and (7), which is the wrong result.

What if instead of saying that future contingents lack truth value, we say that they are all false? This requires a slight modification to the account of p being true at a history. Instead of saying that p is true at h provided that there is some future time t such that pt0 is in h(t), we need to say that there is some future time t such that pt0 is in h(t′) for all t′ ≥ t. This gives the right truth values for (1) and (2), but it also makes (7) true.

I think the above open futurist accounts of entailment work nicely for statements with a single unbounded quantifier over times, but once we get alternating quantifiers like in (5), where the second conjunct is of the form ttϕ, things break down.

Perhaps the open futurist just needs to be willing to bite the bullet and say that (5) entails (7)?

Open Theism and divine promises

Open Theist Christians tend to think that there are some things God knows about the future, and these include the content of God’s promises to us. God’s promises are always fulfilled.

But it seems that the content of many of God’s promises depends on free choices. For imagine that all the recipients of God’s promise freely choose to release God from the promise; then God would be free not to follow the promise, it appears, and so he could freely choose not to act in according to the promise. Thus there seems to be a sequence of creaturely and divine free choices on which the content of the promise does not come about.

This argument may not work for all of God’s promises. Some of God’s promises are covenants, and it may be that covenants are a type of agreement in which neither party can release the other. There may be other unreleasable promises: perhaps when x promises to punish y, that’s a promise y cannot release x from. But do we have reason to think that God makes no “simple promises”, promises other than covenants and promises of punishment?

I do not think this is a definitive argument against open theism. The open theist can bite the bullet and say that God doesn’t always know he will fulfill his promises. But it is interesting to see that on open theism, God’s knowledge of the future is even more limited than we might have initially thought.

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Open theism and the Incarnation

Here is a very plausible pair of claims:

  1. The Son could have become incarnate as a different human being.

  2. God foreknew many centuries ahead of time which human being the Son would become incarnate as.

Regarding 1, of course, the Son could not have been a different person—the person the Son is and was and ever shall be is the second person of the Trinity. But Son could have been a different human being.

Here is a sketch of an argument for 1:

  1. If the identity of a human being depends on the body, then if the Son became incarnate as a 3rd century BC woman in India, this would be a different human being from Jesus (albeit the same person).

  2. If the identity of a human being depends on the soul, then God could have created a different soul for the Son’s incarnation.

  3. The identity of a human being depends on either the body or the soul.

I don’t have as good an argument for 2 as I do for 1, but I think 2 is quite plausible given what Scripture says about God’s having planned out the mission of Jesus from of old.

Now add:

  1. If the Son could have become incarnate as a different human being, which human being he became incarnate as depends on a number of free human choices in the century preceding the incarnation.

Now, 1, 2 and 3 leads to an immediate problem for an open theist Christian (my thinking on this is inspired by a paper of David Alexander, though his argument is different) who thinks God doesn’t foreknow human free choices.

Why is 3 true? Well, if the identity of a human being even partly depends on the body (as is plausible), given that (plausibly) Mary was truly a biological mother of Jesus, then if Mary’s parents had not had any children, the body that Jesus actually had would not have existed, and an incarnation would have happened with a different body and hence a different human being.

Objection: God could have created Mary—or the body for the incarnation—directly ex nihilo in such a case, or God could have overridden human free will if some human were about to make a decision that would lead to Mary not existing.

Response: If essentiality of origins is true, then it is logically impossible for the same body to be created ex nihilo as actually had a partial non-divine cause. But I don’t want the argument to depend on essentiality of origins. Instead, I want to argue as follows. Both of the solutions in the objection require God to foreknow that he would in fact engage in such intervention if human free choices didn’t cooperate with his plan. God’s own interventions would be free choices, and so on open theism God wouldn’t know that he would thus intervene. One might respond that God could resolve to ensure that a certain body would become available, and a morally perfect being always keeps his resolutions. But while perhaps a morally perfect being always keeps his promises, I think it is false that a morally perfect being always keeps his resolutions. Unless one is resolving to do something that one is already obligated to do, it is not wrong to change one’s mind in a revolution. I suppose God could have promised someone that he would ensure the existence of a certain specific body, but we have no evidence of such a specific promise in Scripture, and it seems an odd maneouver for God to have to make in order to know ahead of time who the human that would save the world is.

What if the identity of a human depends solely on the soul? But then the identity of the human being that the Son would become incarnate as would depend on God’s free decision which soul to create for that human being, and the same remarks as I made about resolutions in the previous paragraph would apply.

Monday, July 14, 2025

The Reverse Special Composition Question

Van Inwagen famously raised the Special Composition Question (SCQ): What is an informative criterion for when a proper plurality of objects composes a whole.

There is, however, the Reverse Special Composition Question (RSCQ): What is an informative criterion for when an object is composed of a proper plurality?

The SCQ seems a more fruitful question when we think of parts as prior to the whole. The RSCQ seems a more fruitful question when we think of wholes as prior to the parts.

If by parts we mean something like “integral parts”, we have a pretty quick starter option for answering the RSCQ:

  1. An object is composed of a proper plurality of parts just in case it takes up more than a point of space.

I am not inclined to accept (1) because I like the possibility of extended simples, but it is a pretty neat and simple answer. Suppose that (1) is correct. Then we have a kind of simplicity argument for the thesis that the whole is prior to its parts. If the parts are prior to the whole, SCQ is a reasonable question, but doesn’t have an elegant and plausible answer (let us suppose). If the whole is prior to the parts, SCQ is not a reasonable question but RSCQ instead is, and RSCQ has an elegant and plausible answer (let us suppose). So we have some reason to accept that the whole is prior to the parts.