Here are the arguments from an aetheist's site:
1.An Omniscient (all-knowing) Being Does Not Have Free Will. (Because all of God’s action is pre-determined. He can know everything in advance so all he have to do is select the perfect course of action. )
2.A Perfect God Has No Free Will. It cannot do something that is less moral or "good" than something else, because that would not be perfectly good, but merely second-best good. In every situation, God only has one choice: The most moral/good one. God does not have free will.
3. A Moral God has No Free Will. God, as the ultimate creator, created goodness. God is also said to be a perfectly good benevolent God. This means that God fulfils every possibility of the goodness it has created. It is the be-all and end-all of goodness, perfectly good and unerringly good. If God was not 100 percent perfectly moral, God would not be perfect. This results in a complete lack of free will for God.
2006-11-27
09:28:49
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10 answers
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asked by
Egyptian Prince
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Religion & Spirituality