Thermal
August Member
Did you get a gander on which subforum you're in, brah?
Eta: and the innnie v outie debate is on That Thread.
Eta: and the innnie v outie debate is on That Thread.
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I get it. People talk about these things. Usually after smoking a bowl, eating psilocybin mushrooms or dropping acid.Did you get a gander on which subforum you're in, brah?
Eta: and the innnie v outie debate is on That Thread.
The church is a lot more split than science is on evolution.No "the church" is not split.
Could have fooled me. Your constant use of terms like "Neo-Darwinism" and "modern synthesis" rather than simply "biology" is creationist language.Sure creationist do that. I'm not a creationist though.
Trust me when I say that creationists cherry pick from "pro-evolutionary" (aka. reality-based) websites all the time when they can find a soundbite that when taken out of context appears to support their ideas.Not at all - and you know that because I quoted from a pro-evolutionary website.
Why don't I also get three PhDs and write a book while I'm at it. Thankfully, this isn't really my model, but is paraphrased from some of my reading on the matter. A book I mentioned somewhere in this thread, Determined: A Science of Life without Free Will by Robert Sapolsky, does a very good job of presenting an extensive overview of the reasearch and arguments.<Wanted to address this one separately >
Seems you have developed the world's first working model of how the thought/choice process works. Outstanding! Please tell me all about what exactly the 'genes' are doing and how they are doing it. Without, of course, convenient personifications and other literary devices that gloss over that annoying "I don't have the foggiest ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ idea how any of this works" thingy that keeps popping up in such explanations. .
This is where I don't care how many PHDs one might have. Seems to me that regardless of how smart and educated one might be, determining whether anyone does or doesn't have free will requires at some point non-sequitors or some other fallacy.Why don't I also get three PhDs and write a book while I'm at it. Thankfully, this isn't really my model, but is paraphrased from some of my reading on the matter. A book I mentioned somewhere in this thread, Determined: A Science of Life without Free Will by Robert Sapolsky, does a very good job of presenting an extensive overview of the reasearch and arguments.
As for what the genes are doing, it feels like you want me to describe exactly how the womb, one's childhood, one's culture etc. affects specific genes to encode an amygdala and a prefrontal cortex that will, to use an example from the above book, make a person racist. Which is a bit much, and you should probably read the book for a more detailed overview of that.
All I can offer is the basic idea: there is an uninterrupted line from one's conception to every decision one makes. The genes determine how the body develops in a specific environment, like making certain neurons more or less excitable. The environment is everything from the nutrients in the womb to the culture one grows up in, and it even includes every decision one makes in a sort of feedback loop.
And then you have a baby acting and developing based on its brain and leaving that brain to the child, and the child acting and developing based on the brain the baby has made, etc. Then the adult gets the brain the adolescent has made. Then the adult uses a racial slur because their prefrontal cortex didn't shut down their amygdala, because the baby was given a brain that made decisions which resulted in more decisions which eventually resulted in a prefrontal cortex that wouldn't stop the amygdala's xenophobic fear and agression response.
This is where I don't care how many PHDs one might have. Seems to me that regardless of how smart and educated one might be, determining whether anyone does or doesn't have free will requires at some point non-sequitors or some other fallacy.
Yes, each of us is a product of genetics and the environment/circumstances involved in our lives. But the argument that we don't make conscious choices, ie; have free will in dealing with them seems false.
It doesn't require anything of the sort, it's just an issue that spans many different disciplines from genetics to neuroscience, and detractors are the ones trying to find free will in every crack.This is where I don't care how many PHDs one might have. Seems to me that regardless of how smart and educated one might be, determining whether anyone does or doesn't have free will requires at some point non-sequitors or some other fallacy.
Yes, each of us is a product of genetics and the environment/circumstances involved in our lives. But the argument that we don't make conscious choices, ie; have free will in dealing with them seems false.
I agree. That's why I said the following.It's just as false as claiming that we actually have free will..
Seems to me that regardless of how smart and educated one might be, determining whether anyone does or doesn't have free will requires at some point non-sequitors or some other fallacy.
Twasn't I who made the extraordinary claim, yo.Why don't I also get three PhDs and write a book while I'm at it.
I'm well acquainted with the argument, and have been for many years. I simply find it horse ◊◊◊◊.Thankfully, this isn't really my model, but is paraphrased from some of my reading on the matter. A book I mentioned somewhere in this thread, Determined: A Science of Life without Free Will by Robert Sapolsky, does a very good job of presenting an extensive overview of the reasearch and arguments.
As for what the genes are doing, it feels like you want me to describe exactly how the womb, one's childhood, one's culture etc. affects specific genes to encode an amygdala and a prefrontal cortex that will, to use an example from the above book, make a person racist. Which is a bit much, and you should probably read the book for a more detailed overview of that.
All I can offer is the basic idea: there is an uninterrupted line from one's conception to every decision one makes. The genes determine how the body develops in a specific environment, like making certain neurons more or less excitable. The environment is everything from the nutrients in the womb to the culture one grows up in, and it even includes every decision one makes in a sort of feedback loop.
And then you have a baby acting and developing based on its brain and leaving that brain to the child, and the child acting and developing based on the brain the baby has made, etc. Then the adult gets the brain the adolescent has made. Then the adult uses a racial slur because their prefrontal cortex didn't shut down their amygdala, because the baby was given a brain that made decisions which resulted in more decisions which eventually resulted in a prefrontal cortex that wouldn't stop the amygdala's xenophobic fear and agression response.
*Sigh* I see we're playing that same childish game again. There are multiple lines of argument in this thread, Poem: it is possible to follow one without demanding responses for one of the others. Apparently not for you, though. Petulant sulking and a one-track mind are more your thing, it seems.You know it's a shame I'm not a Christian - we could have a very interesting conversation. ....
Come on CY, in the interest of productive communication - just accept that you are wrong on this.
I have it down even simpler:Ah, the free will question. I simplify it thusly:...
I suppose my "simplest" version should have been something like:I have it down even simpler:
Even if we do not have free will, it makes sense to think and behave in all ways as if we do.
I also quoted noted evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould using the term...and after he said that 'Neo-Darwinism was effectively dead' he remained an evolutionary biologist.Could have fooled me. Your constant use of terms like "Neo-Darwinism" and "modern synthesis" rather than simply "biology" is creationist language.
They do.Trust me when I say that creationists cherry pick from "pro-evolutionary" (aka. reality-based) websites all the time when they can find a soundbite that when taken out of context appears to support their ideas.
Well, lucky for us, we do have direct evidence of free will -- specifically, that we know that we can make a choice. We often even stand frozen wondering which way to go for some time before making that choice. Every single human has evidence for free will in their own experience.The biggest problem for free will is physics. You need a spirit or soul to have that free will, and nothing in physics indicates that this exists. You would need an unidentified force that intermediates between the spirit and the brain - and only brains. And you would need to identify what makes a brain special.
I am not saying the existence of free will and spirits is impossible, but it seems very unlikely to me. Physics have charted out everything that works at human energy levels and scales. The uncertainties of physics lies in the biggest scales, and the smallest scales, and the biggest energy levels, and the tiniest energy levels.
We certainly do believe we have the magical type of free will, but we also believe we have a soul, that there is god looking over us, that crystals can heal us, that water retains memory and like cures like at unimaginable dilutions. What we believe is real does not make something real.Well, lucky for us, we do have direct evidence of free will -- specifically, that we know that we can make a choice. We often even stand frozen wondering which way to go for some time before making that choice. Every single human has evidence for free will in their own experience.
Physics can bemoan the lack of a mechanic all they want. Until you can prove causation of each action all the way back to the beginning of time, pointing to the lack of a known mechanism proves nothing.
Yep that is what we have.The illusion of free will?