The Philosophy Book

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74


GOD FORSEES


OUR FREE THOUGHTS


AND ACTIONS


BOETHIUS (C.480–525 CE)


IN CONTEXT


BRANCH
Epistemology

APPROACH
Christian Platonism

BEFORE
c.350 BCE Aristotle outlines the
problems of claiming as true
any statement about the
outcome of a future event.

c.300 BCE Syrian philosopher
Iamblichus says that what can
be known depends upon the
knower’s capacity.

AFTER
c.1250–70 Thomas Aquinas
agrees with Boethius that God
exists outside of time, and so
is transcendent and beyond
human understanding.

c.1300 John Duns Scotus says
that human freedom rests on
God’s own freedom to act, and
that God knows our future, free
actions by knowing his own,
unchanging—but free—will.

T


he Roman philosopher
Boethius was trained in
the Platonist tradition of
philosophy, and was also a Christian.
He is famous for his solution to a
problem that predates Aristotle:
if God already knows what we are
going to do in the future, how can
we be said to have free will?
The best way to understand the
dilemma is to imagine a situation in
everyday life. For instance, this

afternoon I might go to the cinema,
or I might spend time writing. As it
turns out, I go to the cinema. That
being the case, it is true now (before
the event) that I will go the cinema
this afternoon. But if it is true now,
then it seems that I do not really have
the choice of spending the afternoon
writing. Aristotle was the first to
define this problem, but his answer
to it is not very clear; he seems to
have thought that a sentence such

God lives in the
eternal present.

God knows that I will
go to the cinema today.

I am free not to go
to the cinema today.

God knows the future
as if it were the present.

God foresees our free
thoughts and actions.
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