Actually, only omniscience precludes choice. If you can predict the future perfectly then other people cannot act to change it, because you've already predicted how they will react to any information you feed them (and have already predicted and cannot necessarily change what information you feed them.Not G. Ivingname said:Omniscience plus omnipotence precludes choice. God created everything, and knows how each and every action will lead. God knows what will cause every person to choose right or wrong, all the circumstances and conditions that lead to that choice. Every little niggling issue in a person's life, every glint of sun light in their eye, every movement of an animal that causes the car crash that made them late for work, every gene in their body which determines who they are, who they will be, what advantages and disadvantages they will have in life. Some people are born tall, into prosperity, where making the "moral" choice is easy.
But this can be resolved if omniscience grants not perfect predictions of the future, but a complete set of all perfect predictions for all futures based on how each person within the prediction chooses to act. It makes prophecy trickier, but not necessarily impossible so long as whatever plan you put in place or whatever direction you want to make history take can be made possible and adapted to every single choice of every single individual.
This is unfortunate to say the least, but it is necessary to allow the people who are in charge to face the consequences of their actions. People have to be accountable for what they do under their own power. Which is why Shin can't and shouldn't be held accountable for turning in his own parents.Not G. Ivingname said:Then you have those borns in horrible conditions. Growth stunted because of starvation, being fed lies daily, made to think horrible things are good. Take Shin Dong-hyuk, writer of Escape From Camp 14, who was kept in the North Korean Interment camp, camp 14. The guy was born into prison. Interment is a North Korea practice where enemies of the state, plus three generations of their families, are sent to concentration camps for life. There are people living in their camps for a single grandparent supporting the South during the Korean war. To say the conditions in the camp are horrid does not even begin to cover things.
Back on topic, Shin was taught that the Kims are gods, that their imprisonment was just, and he should put the state above everything else. When Shin was 14, he turned his mother in for just talking about escaping. Shin felt it was just at the time, having been told that escaping was morally wrong and he had seen the consequences of the family members who didn't tell on attempted escapees. Shin didn't escape from the camp not because of the daily torture, the eight months he was in solitary confinement (imagine not being able to stand, and only getting to move your knees when you get your daily torture), but because Shin wanted food. Only after leaving North Korea and it's insane double think did he find some sane morals to follow.