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06-18-2003, 09:46 AM | #351 | |
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06-18-2003, 03:01 PM | #352 | |||||||||||||
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Seeing as we are just chasing one-another around the maypole at this pont, I'm going to resummarize a few points as I address yours below, then I will give you the final word if you want it. Quote:
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I don't think so. To begin with, one can be validated (a=b=c) the other cannot. That would be the first step in the process before ascertaining an origin. Secondly, I'm not sure "where it came from" is a necessary question. Quote:
Speaking of nonsense... What you are saying is the soul gives you control. How can it give you control if you are unaware of it, cannot direct it or operate, and on a base level, cannot even establish a link to confirm it is even there. It makes no sense to say that a metaphyscial, intabgible, unknowable soul is the driver of a process, yet is not autonomous because it is completely controlled by you (despite not being able to do any of the aforementioned). If it is controlled by you, then it is the driver of nothing. I'm sincerely not understading what you think the soul does. I thought I did, but now I know I don't. Quote:
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Why do electrons "orbit" the nucleus of an atom? You can ask every question to the base "why", but at some point the answer is that this is the cause and effect realtionship. You may believe a metaphysical explanation is required for every action at the base level. I do not. Quote:
Sorry to be vague. I absolutely believe your argument is non-sequitur. Quote:
I'm completely failing to see why you consider this a persuasive argument or meaningful point. Quote:
I did a Google search for "brain" and "decision making". I think you'll find there is plenty of information from people more knowledgeable than myself that connects brain function to decision making. If, however, you are just using the term "soul" to name a physical process, than that changes many of your points considerably. Quote:
Here's another good URL=http://scienceblog.com/community/article311.html]article.[/URL] Quote:
I'll restate what I said early on - do not assume there is no physical connection simply because you do not know of one. There is a marked difference between claiming a "metaphysical edge" because you do not have an alternative, and doing so because there is no alternative. |
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06-18-2003, 07:13 PM | #353 | ||||||||||||
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That is the summary of my argument. Quote:
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06-18-2003, 09:51 PM | #354 | |||
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How about "I'm right because I'm right"? Is that a valid reason that shows I'm right? If it is, then I'm right and there is no need to argue. Is that all this argument is going to come to, or do you have a real reason why electrons do not have souls? |
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06-19-2003, 01:35 AM | #355 | |
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06-19-2003, 07:29 AM | #356 | |
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Your point about infinite regression is a good one. It seems most metaphysical concepts of this natural are prone to this type of logical fallacy. The only answer I could think of is that the soul exists in control of itself AND in control of the brain, and that the free will power it excercises are over both itself and the brain, in which case you could say "well if the soul could control itself, why can't the brain", to which I would counter, "because if the brain is self-sufficient, it exists in a deterministic state, and the soul is necessary for free will to exist since it exists outside the determinisitc state". Being a skeptic, I don't even believe in any of these concepts, so I'm finding them increasingly harder to defend. |
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06-20-2003, 07:45 AM | #357 | |||
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I just posted a lengthy response that got f-ing deleted by accident. Rather than re-type everything, I will address only the following: Quote:
I would say that the brain doesn't need any metaphysical driver; it is capable of functioning as a decision making without any superfluous "metaphyscial organ" government it's moves. I have already addressed the brain's function as a decision maker. Your brain responds to inputs and produces outputs. Your inputs are the choices you have in any given situation, your outputs are the decisions you make - observed by some as the results of "free will". I would hazard a guess that 99.999999% of your "free will" decisions are never considered nor comtemplated. They do not require a soul to deliberate over choices. You climb down the stairs without tripping because your brain receives input from your eyes, limbs, etc. and gauges the appropriate responses, sending messages to the rest of your body accordingly. Do you possess the "free will" to step awkwardly on the edge of the stair, increasing your chances of falling? Yes, but this does not happen because your brain can handle this function without you consciously thinking about it - so you don't. In other words, your brain can rcive a message and respond to it without a driver. The more complex the inputs (choice between quitting a medicore, stable job, for an exciting, unstable one) will require more processing and will generate a greater list of choices. Now let's cut to the heart of the matter - how do you actually choose? Enter "the soul", right? Wrong (surely you didn't expect me to acquiesce at this point ) Your brain is not transmitting those "choices" back to you on an even keel. Some aspects of the choices make you feel more nervous than others. Some make you feel sad or happy or horny (as the cae may be). Whatever the response, you are being "pushed" in a direction. "But surely", you may say, "at some point you have to actually choose to keep the job or leave it. That's what the soul does - chooses." At this level, I would get back to simplicity. You must make a choice - i.e. there has to be some result. You cannot make all choices. So the question is, how do you land on one. You respond by doing what you feel is in your best interests - the response is ultimately visceral, regardless of how much logic you employed. It is the natural cause and effect realtionship. One may just as well ask: "how did electrons choose to be negative" or "how did gravity choose to be based on mass instead of area." At the end of the day, if you want to ascribe these choices to metaphysical properties such as "soul", that's up to you. But that nature of "input-output", "cause and effect" that exists in the brain and translates into our responses does not need an added entity. [QUOTE][b]Your point about infinite regression is a good one. It seems most metaphysical concepts of this natural are prone to this type of logical fallacy. This is what I was getting at earlier, but Sharif put it better than I did. The point remains that if the soul doesn't need a soul, then there's no reason to think the brain needs a brain. Otherwise, you could regress intifinitely. "All things need a cause except the uncaused" isn't a very persuasive argument. Quote:
Phew! This is a confusing piece of claptrap, and I say that with all the respect in the world. If the soul is self-sufficient, does it not exist in a deterministic state? No? Because it's "metaphysical", right? Well, I'm not sure what you mean by the brain existing "in a deterministic state," but so long as the brain is capable of receiving new inputs, it is capable of producing new outputs. To me, that sounds as though you can still respond uniquely and "newly" to a given situation, allowing indeterminism when looking ahead. Quote:
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06-20-2003, 07:45 AM | #358 | ||||
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I just posted a lengthy response that got f-ing deleted by accident. Rather than re-type everything, I will address only the following: Quote:
I would say that the brain doesn't need any metaphysical driver; it is capable of functioning as a decision maker without any superfluous "metaphysical organ" governing it's moves. I have already addressed the brain's function as a decision maker. Your brain responds to inputs and produces outputs. Your inputs are the choices you have in any given situation, your outputs are the decisions you make - observed by some as the results of "free will". I would hazard a guess that 99.999999% of your "free will" decisions are never considered nor contemplated. They do not require a soul to deliberate over choices. You climb down the stairs without tripping because your brain receives input from your eyes, limbs, etc. and gauges the appropriate responses, sending messages to the rest of your body accordingly - it makes the decision for you. Do you possess the "free will" to step awkwardly on the edge of the stair, increasing your chances of falling? Yes, but this does not happen because your brain can handle this function without you consciously thinking about it - so you don't. In other words, your brain can receive a message and respond to it without a driver. The more complex the inputs (choice between quitting a medicore, stable job, for an exciting, unstable one) will require more processing and will generate a greater list of choices. Now let's cut to the heart of the matter - how do you actually choose? Enter "the soul", right? Wrong (surely you didn't expect me to acquiesce at this point ) Your brain is not transmitting those "choices" back to you on an even keel. Some aspects of the choices make you feel more nervous than others. Some make you feel sad or happy or horny (as the cae may be). Whatever the response, you are being "pushed" in a direction. "But surely", you may say, "at some point you have to actually choose to keep the job or leave it. That's what the soul does - chooses." At this level, I would get back to simplicity. You must make a choice - i.e. there has to be some result. You cannot make all choices. So the question is, how do you land on one. You respond by doing what you feel is in your best interests - the response is ultimately visceral, regardless of how much logic you employed. It is the natural cause and effect realtionship. One may just as well ask: "how did electrons choose to be negative" or "how did gravity choose to be based on mass instead of area." At the end of the day, if you want to ascribe these choices to metaphysical properties such as "soul", that's up to you. But that nature of "input-output", "cause and effect" that exists in the brain and translates into our responses does not need an added entity. Quote:
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Phew! This is a confusing piece of claptrap, and I say that with all the respect in the world. If the soul is self-sufficient, does it not exist in a deterministic state? No? Because it's "metaphysical", right? (Why does metaphysical=indetermined?) Well, I'm not sure what you mean by the brain existing "in a deterministic state," but so long as the brain is capable of receiving new inputs, it is capable of producing new outputs. To me, that sounds as though you can still respond uniquely and "newly" to a given situation, allowing indeterminism when looking ahead. Quote:
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06-20-2003, 12:32 PM | #359 |
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I'm coming in late having not read through from the OP. It gets ridiculous when threads get this wrong, but assigning "free will" to the soul obviously begs the question.
"Free will", to the best of my knowledge, has never been adequately defined. What the hell is it? If a choice is not deterministic, it literally is without cause. If there is no cause, it must be random. What is "free will" then, if not randomness? If you ascribe a cause or purpose to a "free" choice, you are in fact providing the cause of the choice and implicitly implying determinism. If you argue that an alternative choice existed for the same causes, you again beg the question. Then what caused you to make the choice you did? Answer this, and you provide a cause and admit causality. Fail to answer, and you admit to ignorance of how the choice was made (and naming an absence of knowledge does not make the absence of knowledge a "thing"), or randomness in the choosing mechanism. Now, if we have words for "ignorance", "randomness" and "causality", what purpose does the term "free will" serve? None whatsoever, other than to mislead people into thinking they have a means of resolving an inconsistency in belief - when all they have is a redundant word. It is in this capacity that the word continues to serve those who do not wish to face the inevitable conclusion that causality and randomness are the only two choices. Neither concept, of course, requires a soul, God or anything else that is usually hitched to the phrase in the world's most oft-repeated fallacy by naming. Last note: I'm not actually arguing that the universe is of necessity entirely causal. It is logically possible to construct model of a universe which behaves very much like our own, with randomness occuring in a limited way. Its possible that some sub-atomic "choices" are, in fact, random, but this certainly doesn't require any of the metaphysics of religion or spiritually to reconcile with reason. |
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