James,
Thanks for your response, mate. I don't really have anything to rejoin with, what you write is fair enough, except that I would only suggest that just as my idea of a Source splitting into the duality of God/Devil for the purpose of forcing its own evolution is speculative, so is your idea of the Devil's nature being driven by unresolvable suicidal tendencies. Both are legitimate possibilities, but as of now, we don't have enough information to know whether either is true.
QMan,
Welcome back.
QMan wrote:Interestingly, the bible conveys that, concerning our sins, God has said he will eventually forget them (to be able to have us around I guess

).
Oh? Can you provide a quote, please? Based on my reading of the Bible, in particular the Gospels, there are many whose sins will *not* be forgotten (by which I assume you really mean "forgiven"), and who will thus be gnashing their teeth in hell.
QMan wrote:By the same token, even though God is capable of all foreknowledge, he may have decided that he does not want to know and so sets creation in motion but let's us muddle around until it's time to call in the chips.
This is inconsistent with God's prediction of various occurrences in the Bible though.
QMan wrote:Harry Baird: In fact, this does not represent a problem to my assertion, the very fact that infinity never elapses counts *in favour* of my view. Basically, I'm applying the same very simple probabilistic analysis to your view of heaven that I applied above to IC's view of the Garden: if p is the probability of any inhabitant of heaven succumbing to temptation and making a wrong choice in heaven during any finite period of time, t, then (1-p)^n as n approaches infinity is the probability of that inhabitant not *ever* making a bad choice, and, as for the Garden, this formula approaches 0 as n approaches infinity (i.e. as time continues on and on and on and ...) - so long as p is *not* 0.
Qman: Actually this is not quite correct. This type of argument applies to, let's say, a manufacturing process where identical parts go through a process held constant with a constant probability p of failure for any one of the identical parts for eternity for an eternal process.
Whether or not the probability is constant is irrelevant, the only thing that matters is whether or not it is non-zero for an infinity (which is not the same as saying that it must *always* be non-zero, because you can take a finite period during which it is zero from infinity, and still be left with an infinite period during which it is non-zero - due to the magic of infinity). The result over infinity whether the probability is a constant or merely consistently non-zero over an infinity is the same: the probability of succumbing to temptation approaches 100%.
QMan wrote:In Eden the situation is different.
1. Adam and Eve are constantly changing, evolving growing in intellect, understanding and emotion so does their p. My guess is it will significantly improve, go to zero.
I have no idea what you mean by "will", assuming you believe that the Bible accurately recorded this event, because then this scenario is over rather than ongoing (as your "will" implies), and, evidently, p did not at all go to zero, because Adam and Eve succumbed to temptation.
QMan wrote:2. The p of the manufacturing environment, the garden, is most likely constantly changing and is not as predictably constant as a controlled manufacturing environment. That p can also go to zero.
If p goes to zero, i.e. there is no possibility of Adam and Eve succumbing to temptation, then how could they be considered to have what IC refers to as "genuine" free will? Doesn't "genuine" free will imply that there is *some* meaningful possibility of making any given choice?
QMan wrote:3. Similar to a processed part, their "manufacture" (period of exposure to a risky p) could cease altogether when that production stage is completed. The p will simply cease to exist or become irrelevant.
I have no idea what in the Garden of Eden corresponds to a "production stage", nor to its completion. The best I can come up with is that the production stage corresponds to an initial period of time in which the tree in all of its temptation exists, and the completion of the production stage corresponds to a subsequent period of time in which the tree and thus temptation have been removed from the Garden. Is this what you mean or am I guessing wrong?
QMan wrote:4. Don't forget about the process or manufacturing engineer here. His job is to tweak the process to make p go to zero anyhow. In other words, your deterministic argument is that God would not have intervened at any stage to eventually provide a zero risk environment.
If God were to intervene in that way, then, as far as I understand IC's views on free will, He would have abrogated Adam and Eve's free will. As far as I understand IC, his notion is that "genuine" free will requires that God allow Adam and Eve the *possibility* of making, freely, the choice to succumb, which implies that p must be non-zero.
QMan wrote:Btw, will this tome also be available in e-book format and will it still be affordable or get too large for that?
It will *only* be available in e-book format. Trees are living beings, whose deaths for the mere convenience of paper is unjustifiable given the electronic alternative. Don't worry about affordability though, mate: as a valued respondent in this thread, you will be offered a free, signed copy.