Let’s say there is a choice, between a and b. There is another choice, between a and b, the same two things. How does variable c, the situation or affecting energy, affect the choice? Does that mean there are two types of choices? Has that in itself, at some point, been a choice? Is that (has it been a choice) not the question of whether or not one believes there is a God?
The situation, your factor c, is always important for the outcome of a choice. Call it the ‘gravity of choice’ if you will. There is always something extra involved in making a choice because people make decisions based on their own experience, and from moment to moment those experiences differ threatening to modify one’s choice.
Now if you’re asking if there are two parallel existences and up to the point when the choice is made the world’s have existed in identical states, then yes the choice will be the same.
If my view of religion is correct God has nothing to do with man’s choice between option a and b. If there is a God and he did create us, God did so with the intention of watching us work. So the possible resulting differences between choice is not proof of God, only proof that the human mind has many layers and my psychology degree isn’t going to go to waste.
HA!!! That has got to be the best answer I’ve seen in awhile…LMAO. =D>