HeuristicsInc wrote: Introduction...I'm not a debater; .....(organized arguements) .... I'm not a debater.....concluding statements.-bill
Could'a fooled me...
That's what we call a red herring Bill! Didn't work....
How does your first sentence imply your second?the Jazz wrote:The outcome of any choice you make will be known immediately after you make it, so if time exists beyond the Present there is no free will. By that logic there is also no such thing as life, or a soul, and everything is increasingly complex patterns and algorithms.
roymond wrote: Just as an aside, I had a visitation when I was 13 years old.
I suppose it depends on how you define the soul. If all of the past, present, and future is preordained and immutable, then I see two possibilities. 1) Something which is "alive" is different from that which is not merely my virtue of being the result of (and/or resulting in) more complex patterns and algorithms. 2) If events do not boil down to calculable cause and effect relationships, and the physical laws of the universe do not explain events down to the last detail, but all time and events are still immutable, then there must be some other force or being which is the cause of events occurring one way and not another. Either way, I cannot comprehend the existence of the soul without free will.15-16 puzzle wrote:How does your first sentence imply your second?the Jazz wrote:The outcome of any choice you make will be known immediately after you make it, so if time exists beyond the Present there is no free will. By that logic there is also no such thing as life, or a soul, and everything is increasingly complex patterns and algorithms.
I like the definition of God as knowing all the outcomes of every choice you could make, but letting you make the choice. Also the 99.99% accuracy thing works as well. Like all the arguments I've seen against fatalism, they do limit God in some way.Future Boy wrote:"God... can... predict with 99.99% accuracy what you will five minutes from now or fifty years from now."
Oh man, you so craaazy! Your definitely right that we must think, as reading this sentence is proof (perception -> consciousness -> thought). But why does only having one outcome to all your choices rid you of your consciousness? Maybe I just don't understand how the soul argument works.the Jazz wrote:Assuming the lack of free will, is it passage of time (or one-directional travel from past to future in that dimension) which causes these delusions of life and the soul? But in order to have delusions, I must think; in order to think, I must have a soul, right? I keep dancing round and round with paradox.
Well, easier to be brave among friends. There are folks here laying out their spiritual beliefs out. I hardly see this as any more brave. I wasn't asserting that this was proof of anything, just relating an experience I had up close. True, there are very few people I've talked with about this, as it remains a mysterious thing in my life. I wondered if others have had what they felt were genuine encounters (whether or not they felt it was "real" or otherwise legitimate). And no, this wasn't a stranger who walked into the house. It seemed more a spirit in human form. That's all.Leaf wrote:That's a pretty brave story to put on the net my man!roymond wrote: Just as an aside, I had a visitation when I was 13 years old.
I don't doubt it. I once knew a girl who swore she had prophetic dreams*, and I didn't doubt her either. There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.roymond wrote: Just as an aside, I had a visitation when I was 13 years old.
I have a hard time putting it into words. What gives conciousness significance? The ability to observe of the world around it? Would it be possible to develop higher thought without the physical senses or a connection to the empirical world? Anyhow, that's a digression already in the second sentence – getting back on track...Puce wrote:But why does only having one outcome to all your choices rid you of your consciousness? Maybe I just don't understand how the soul argument works.
And am now attempting to explain that the resulting conclusion (free will impossible) is not acceptable because it contradicts my position that I exist in some manner beyond the empirical. I may be wrong, but in that case I do not exist, so after I have recognized the fact that I may be wrong, there is nothing left but to approach the world as though I were right.the Jazz wrote:Here's an example: if you could go back in time to late 2003 and talk to Grady Little during Game 7 of the ALCS, you might tell him that you knew he would leave Pedro in for the seventh inning. And he does, because that's what happened. So does that mean he didn't have free will at the time? No. Because then even the concept of free will is impossible, given the objective existence of time in dimensions other than the Present.
Bang! There it is. Or, my opinions in <a href="http://www.songhole.org/~puce/songs/Puc ... .MP3">song form</a> (actually, this is a criticism of people who try to derive normative ethical principles from determinism. It's also Rap-Rock 8)). Cognitive psychology suggests that consciousness arises from us having a “front-row-seat” to the inner workings of our brain. Whether there is free will or not, your consciousness (from a neurological perspective) is your brain processing the information that is not rejected by your thalamus. I do not believe that depriving someone of freewill deprives them of consciousness. Reading your post I think our disagreement comes from differing definitions of consciousness: mine is “Having an awareness of one's environment and one's own existence, sensations, and thoughts.” This definition does not necessitate freedom.What reason is there to infer the existence of a soul in the first place? We have no idea whether a computer or a paramecium or a rock "thinks" to itself. We look at them as merely consequences of mathematical and physical equations; we think that, knowing the state of a closed system of nonliving things down to the last detail at one point in time, we know also its future and past in the same detail because it is ruled by cold hard facts. [Some people mistakenly believe that] the difference with "life" is that we make choices which are not governed by empirical facts and laws, due to the fact that we are alive and think abstractly. But how can you prove that the things we mark as "living" are not just the same, and that the level of sophistication in the cold hard fact by which we are governed is merely so much greater than that of things we call "not living" that we experience it as special and call it "thought?"
Truer words have never been posted. We think of the past as set; we are not free to change it. If time is a dimension (which implies that the future has the same properties as the past, just as up has the same properties as down), then the future is set and we are not free to change it. I do not believe in the dimensionality of time as anything other than a convenient but inaccurate mathematical model. I think there is the present, and that’s it. The past exists only in your hippocampus. Time as classically defined just doesn’t make any sense to me, and I’ve never seen a good argument for its existence.the Jazz wrote:The concept of free will is impossible, given the objective existence of time in dimensions other than the Present
I wouldn't go so far as to say people who believe this are definitely mistaken, just that there is no empirical evidence to support that belief.Puce wrote:I wrote:[Some people mistakenly believe that] the difference with "life" is that we make choices which are not governed by empirical facts and laws, due to the fact that we are alive and think abstractly.
You are using the phrase "without cause" when you should be using the phrase "without any apparent cause". The unknown factor could be free-will, as defined as "the ability to view the same set of data in different ways". Just because the set of factors remains the same doesn't mean we have to interpret them the same way every single time.Puce wrote:If A is chosen every time then this fits with the idea that we are decision making machines. We add up all the factors in a scenario (and this includes the soul’s influence) and make a decision; if all the factors are the same the decision will always be the same.
If we sometimes choose A and sometimes choose B, then there is some unknown factor at work, like a universal unpredictability or the influence of something non-physical. The problem is that if the scenario (and your mental state) is exactly the same both times, yet the outcome oscillates between the two options without cause, our freewill is reduced to a coin toss.
I can’t find freewill in either possibility. Further, this experiment can be applied to any decision. To me it seems pretty solid. Either that or I'm a nut.
That's right, I forgot to put something in there. The development of an accurate model was not really my goal at the time (I formulated that large paragraph last night as I was typing, actually). The temporal dimensions model (for lack of a better term) is no better than H. G. Wells' classic linear model. I would say it's even more farfetched, but in this context a model is either correct or it isn't, and varying quantatative degrees of incorrectness are meaningless. Also, that last sentence was completely unnecessary and overly self-important, and should have been removed–and this sentence as well. But I'm a rebel! Woo!Puce wrote:Elegant theory, but it forces us to make a lot more assumptions than existing theories about the nature of time that explain the same things.
The weakness in this argument is that the presence of time is an unsolved variable. If you were to make multiple coin flips, here are two possibilites I see: first, that the flips occur at separate moments in time, and thus the deciding factor in your decision may be in some way a result of your "location" in time; second, that the flips occur simultaneously, in which case it seems they either occur in separate realities (a la the "all possibilities realized" model) or as potential outcomes (a la uncertainty principle), unresolved during the Present and resolving only once the moment is Past.The problem is that if the scenario (and your mental state) is exactly the same both times, yet the outcome oscillates between the two options without cause, our freewill is reduced to a coin toss.
The unknown factor could be free-will as a function of time, defined as "the ability to view the same set of data in different ways at different times."
What I meant was that the cause of this indeterminism could be randomness or it could be "freewill". Both are without cause (freewill is necessarily without cause, otherwise it is not free) and seemingly without reason. If I can look at the same set of data and sometimes see it one way and sometimes see it another way that certainly makes me free, but I don't see how it makes me wilfully free. In this case my freedom comes from the unreliability of my perceptions and the unpredictability of my impulses. If I can "view the same set of data" in arbitrary ways lets assume there's some part of my brain (or my soul, if your into that sort of thing) that allows for this variance. Let's say you're in a restaurant thinking of skippin' the bill; suppose 99% of the time you see the set of data one way and pay the bill, and 1% of the time you see it another way and make a run for it. It seem that freewill boils down to either the unpredictability of our perceptions or the effects of random impulse; this is not my definition of freewill. Nor is it the legal definition: people who have clouded or variable perception or who are acting under the control of impulses are frequently found not (or less) responsible for their actions.15-16 puzzle wrote:The unknown factor could be free-will, as defined as "the ability to view the same set of data in different ways". Just because the set of factors remains the same doesn't mean we have to interpret them the same way every single time.Puce wrote:There is some unknown factor at work, like a universal unpredictability [randomness] or the influence of something non-physical [freewill]. The problem is that if the scenario (and your mental state) is exactly the same both times, yet the outcome oscillates between the two options without cause, our freewill is reduced to a coin toss.