(December 16, 2019 at 10:35 am)Mister Agenda Wrote:(December 10, 2019 at 12:09 pm)Klorophyll Wrote: It's just the way you put the words that makes you think there is a contradiction. An omniscient being simultaneously wants and knows what he will do and he will do it. When you say "he can't do something different than what he knows he will do "[sic.] you are already assuming he changed his mind and the future he projected didn't please him enough, you are accusing the deity of mood swings.
I'm 'accusing' the proposed tri-Omni deity of not being able to change its mind. Sounds like you agree.
A deity doesn't change its mind by definition, everything is "figured out" from the first shot. This fallacy is why people think foreknowledge implies coercion.
Saying "not being able to change its mind" is perfectly equivalent to saying "God cannot make 1+1=3". Both are complete logical impossibilities and have nothing to do with omniscience.