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06-13-2003, 10:45 AM | #341 | ||||||||
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06-14-2003, 04:20 AM | #342 | |||||
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I state my point again: If there is no free will, then whether you turn left or right is pre-determined. Just like the rock hit by another rock MUST fly off in a certain direction, so to MUST you choose a certain direction. The chain of causality might be much, much more complex, but you still MUST choose left instead of right it the is what the chain of causes leads to, just like the rock cannot fly off in the other direction. If there is free will, then obviously you have a choice. But we cannot distinguish whether or not you MUST turn right or mearly chose to turn right given the information that you chose to turn right once. Hence you have no evidence that supports one scenario over the others, because you cannot tell if you really had a choice or if you only had a choice. So there is no evidence for the fact that free will exists in this scenario, or any other scenario where we only see the outcome once. There is nothing that prevents a rock hit by another rock from flying off in a completely unexpected direction. No barriers or walls or forces. Rather, the only option is that it move in a particular option. Just like it is possible the only option for you is to turn right. Quote:
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OK, fine we will use the word complexity. The same argument I made before applies. To assign something a soul according to your defintion there are two factors, both of which must be fulfilled: A) It has and makes choices. B) It has complexity. Now: 1) Complexity is a physical attribute, as it is not metaphysical. 2) Given two objects satisfying A (an electron and a human), the possesion of free will is determined by B 3) Hence the possesion of free will be partly determined by a physical attribute. For your definition to be correct, free will must be determined by non-physical factors only. But it is not, see (3), so your definition does not work. I guess it does seem like a strawman, because you didn't require free will to be be determined only by non-physical factors. I guess you would call the non-physical factors the soul. But in my opinion, if you admit that there are some free will is due some physical factors and some undetectable metaphysical factors, then occam's razor will step in and rule out the metaphysical factors and say free will is caused only the physical ones, which is why you need free will to be have only non-physical components. Complexity alone is simpler explanation for free will than complexity+soul, which is why in my opinion if you allow free will to have any physical factors, your definition will be invalid. That is why the argument is not a strawman. Damn I'm tired. I hope some of that made sense. |
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06-15-2003, 09:10 PM | #343 | |||||||||||
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But these are two different meanings for "driver". When you say "logic drives truth", what you are really saying is "logic leads to truth" or "logic helps identify truth." When you say "soul drives free will" you are saying "the soul exerts something that motivates free will". The key difference I see is that all that is needed to "prove" logic is to describe it and acknowledge that it is a man-made process. The reason the soul fails this scrutiny is that you are not saying it is describable, and you are not saying it is man made. Rather, you are saying "soul" exists outside the realm of our experience, and it exists as a third-party creation that no other party can verify. Quote:
That's fine because that's all it needs. The 'logic' process was defined, created and named through humans. The soul, you are suggesting, is undefinable, created by god and named through...divine revelation? (I assume this because if it cannot be measured but is 'known', it must have been revealed by one who can measure it) Quote:
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But that's another discussion. I think my statement above holds in that the similarities are not really so, simply because I can admit logic exists because we say it does - we did not invent contradiction, we did not invite "a=b, b=c, a=c", but we identified these things and related them to our world. Do you feel the soul exists simply because we have declared so? What have we done to make this connection? It sounds like you are saying that we connected our ability to make choices a "driver", but from where did we identify a driver? Quote:
It seems a little chicken-and-egg, no? If something else controls the soul, then we do not have free will. If we control the soul, then free will drives the soul and not vice-versa. Quote:
Having free will doesn't necessitate the soul, by the way. It may necessitate something, but not necessarily a soul. This is analogous to arguing that the universe's existence necessitates god. "If god existed, the universe would be 'x'. The universe is 'x', therefore god exists." You are working backwards - asserting a force exists by defining it so as to make it necessary. Quote:
See above. God is not necessary just because the universe exists, regardless if you have defined god as the cause. For example - if my cat sleeps on my sweater, there will be cat hair on it. If I find cat hair on my sweater, does that mean the cat slept there? No. You may say "if god exists, he will cure my cancer". If your cancer goes into remission, does that prove god did it? Quote:
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06-16-2003, 11:05 AM | #344 | |||
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My point: We have the choice of choosing left or right, and the choice is determined by my actions. Reasonably, there is nothing stopping me from turning right, when I choose to turn left. In the same manner, if I did turn left, there was nothing stopping me from choosing right. My choice alone is separating these two outcomes. If something is in control of my choice, I would lack free will. From my perspective, and this is were empircal evidence comes into play, I could of choosen either direction. There is nothing in the realms of science to prove we have or do not have a chocie, so what else can we go on other then observable evidence? Your position entails there is some physical basis for my choice, based on previous states, that should be predictable, or at least identifiable, but alas, there is none that can be found. Quote:
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Indeed, you've strawmanned my definition of complexity to be rooted in the physical, but what if I say the definition of complexity IS the soul, and all living things are necessarily more complex due to the pressence of the soul? That is what separates free will from the random choice of electrons, the complexity of the metaphysical soul. Don't worry, your agruments make sense. They really had me thinking! |
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06-16-2003, 11:09 AM | #345 | |||||||||||||||
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This is nonsense. Without a soul you would not have free will, with a soul you have free will. "Control" is not even an issue. You are in control BECAUSE OF the soul. Quote:
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06-17-2003, 01:31 AM | #346 | ||||
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Now, how do we conduct this? Let's do this hypothetically by having someone stand at a crossroad, and we will have them pick left or right. Now were are doing a test so we are not assuming either explanation to be correct. Instead, let's see what would happen if each one was correct and then compare that to what we see. The one that fits best will be the correct one. If free will exists: The person will chose left or right. If free will does not exist: The person will only ever chose one direction in the same set of circumstances. Now we can tell them apart. We tell the person to chose which road they want to turn down several times and see whether they chose one or both using the exact same starting conditions. We need to do it several times, because if we only do it once we will never be able to tell them apart. Both predict that they will turn down a road, but we want to know if they could turn down either road. To do that, we need to show that they do turn down either road in practice. We don't care if they could or couldn't in theory, because we are testing the theory. We must show that the theory works in practice. We need the exact same conditions each time because if we don't use the exact same conditions, if the person choses a different direction it could be because of a difference in conditions, not a difference in free will. If we do not control the variables, it is not a valid test. But we simply cannot control peoples brains enough to rule out the possible that the different decsion is due to a random difference in their brain state, like a single neuron at a different excitation level. We cannot, in practice, control the variables enough to make it a definitive test, because we cannot, in practice, ensure the starting conditions are the same. So we can't find the empircal evidence we need from this test, and in the absence of empirical evidence, occam's razor will rule out free will. Both are equally unprovable using current technology, but they are not equally simple explanations. Quote:
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And now I'm off to study for my chem exam. |
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06-17-2003, 09:11 PM | #347 |
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Chips on the Brain
This page just gave me a thought:
What would be the implications of microchips being implanted in our brains which would upload images we see in our direct perceptions and even our dreams to the internet, so people can download in real time what we are directly perceiving in their cell/mobile phones or laptops or ever their own brains which also has chip implants. What implications would this have for the so called "soul"? |
06-18-2003, 04:19 AM | #348 |
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In the pilot/plane analogy, how is the pilot making his own decisions regarding where to pilot the plane? I think the analogy suffers from an infinite regression.
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06-18-2003, 09:43 AM | #349 | |||
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06-18-2003, 09:44 AM | #350 | |
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Re: Chips on the Brain
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