MarkCorrigan
Героям слава!
Will you actually provide any evidence for any of your claims this time?
Ah now Mark, don't you know as a true Turk all you gotta have is faith?Will you actually provide any evidence for any of your claims this time?
Ever hear of a Holy Bartender?No human is holy.
I need to watch that movie.Ever hear of a Holy Bartender?
I just thought I'd pop in and provide the definitive answer to the determinism vs free will argument:
Determinists are NPC's.
The rest of us, who do have free will, are the players.
Isn't it nice how we can both get our way?
Interesting, I see the opposite. Determinists think they've got it all figured out, and thoroghly understand things they know nothing about. Free-willers say "well free will certainly seems to be the case, and until compelling evidence is presented, it's my working model".I agree one hundred percent.
Determinists understand their place as wholly part of the universe, whereas all others are suckers that think they're different and special.
Okay, maybe not quite a hundred, but pretty close.
At any rate, my challenge to the believers is what it has been. Let's say that you have Free Will, and I don't. I say, anything you can do I can do better. Okay, wait. I say, I can do it at least as well. That's my thesis. I just got caught up in song for a moment, sorry. What can you, with all your powers, do that I cannot do, without them? What can you do that is of any value, that is; that's part of the challenge.
Anyone?
I can suddenly, and for no reason, go eat some food I don't like the taste of, then break the plate over my head.
If I didn't have free will, I'd be constrained to actions I thought might be to my net benefit or would at least minimize the negatives.
It doesn't seem very adaptive, though. The best strategy seems to be to use it as little as possible.
Ok. What is all this about 'powers'? Free will is not a power; it's an understanding of how stuff, like consciousness, works.Yes, well, it's a classic debate. I was once a Free Will believer. Naturally! That's how it seems, being a human, that the mind is the Director. The Gods used to be a bunch of powerful people, basically, each one representing ideal aspects of humans and/or nature, but as the God Inflation Wars progressed, God became more and more idealized. God became us idealized. And God reflected how we see ourselves at our most idealized: The Unmoved Mover. That's what I've been thinking on lately, anyhow. And just like the omnipotent, omnibenevolent, omniscient God of our fantasies, it doesn't make any sense upon examination.
It is now, 2025, quite clear that the body generates the mind. How else could it possibly be?
At any rate, my challenge to the believers is what it has been. Let's say that you have Free Will, and I don't. I say, anything you can do I can do better. Okay, wait. I say, I can do it at least as well. That's my thesis. I just got caught up in song for a moment, sorry. What can you, with all your powers, do that I cannot do, without them? What can you do that is of any value, that is; that's part of the challenge.
Anyone?
Allah knew from the beginning of time you would have a food and crockery fetish.I can suddenly, and for no reason, go eat some food I don't like the taste of, then break the plate over my head.
If I didn't have free will, I'd be constrained to actions I thought might be to my net benefit or would at least minimize the negatives.
It doesn't seem very adaptive, though. The best strategy seems to be to use it as little as possible.
Ah, welcome back to the discussion, person without any real consciousness.I agree one hundred percent.
Determinists understand their place as wholly part of the universe, whereas all others are suckers that think they're different and special.
Okay, maybe not quite a hundred, but pretty close.
If you read the full of the verses, you will always see the struggle with the attackers in the defense battle.
You are a cluster of arbitrary cells molded by arbitrary experiences. Any "choice" you make to change the trajectory of your molding is entirely dependent on the arbitrary cells and molding that has come before, in a sort of feedback loop.I just thought I'd pop in and provide the definitive answer to the determinism vs free will argument:
Determinists are NPC's.
The rest of us, who do have free will, are the players.
Isn't it nice how we can both get our way?
No, I don't. I can access that information internally. It's right there. I don't need to prove it. If you don't have it, then that's you, not me. I can't access your consciousness, but I can access my own. I know what the particulars of it tell me, and it doesn't fit your model. I've experienced the proof every single moment of my existence. That doesn't mean you can access that proof. You can't.If you want to argue for free will, you'll have to explain how such a thing can exist in such a system. Or explain how the necessarily entirely deterministic choice of arbitrarily molded cells still counts as free will.
Sort of how believers can access the existence of God internally, even though it makes absolutely no sense.No, I don't. I can access that information internally. It's right there. I don't need to prove it. If you don't have it, then that's you, not me. I can't access your consciousness, but I can access my own. I know what the particulars of it tell me, and it doesn't fit your model. I've experienced the proof every single moment of my existence. That doesn't mean you can access that proof. You can't.
No mindgames, just extremely basic logic.So... either you don't have it or you're just playing stupid mind games. Those are literally the only two possibilities. You couldn't access my consciousness without seeing the proof right there in front of you. Apparent. Obvious. Sucks to be you if it's the first option.
Whenever you do what you consider "non-compliance", you just do what your arbitrary cells and experiences have predetermined you to do. There literally is nothing else. Does that count as free will?And the fact that I live in a society that constantly violates my agency doesn't change anything. Sure, the math is in charge now, not the people. That doesn't mean I'll comply, but thanks anyway.
Sorry for not having the same reasons for leaving Christianity that you did. Mine were ethical, and so freaking long ago that it's barely worth mentioning. To be specific, it was the Euthyphro question, even though I hadn't read Plato yet.Sort of how believers can access the existence of God internally, even though it makes absolutely no sense.
No mindgames, just extremely basic logic.
Whenever you do what you consider "non-compliance", you just do what your arbitrary cells and experiences have predetermined you to do. There literally is nothing else. Does that count as free will?
I'm genuinely curious about an answer and explanation to that last question. It is something that I've turned over in my mind occasionally, but personally I always arrive at "No", because I cannot think of a satisfactory explanation. Everything that comes before that particular quandary is incredibly obvious and irrefutable.
Irrelevant is right. Absolutely none of this addresses anything in my post.Sorry for not having the same reasons for leaving Christianity that you did. Mine were ethical, and so freaking long ago that it's barely worth mentioning. To be specific, it was the Euthyphro question, even though I hadn't read Plato yet.
I don't need to justify God. I'm not even an atheist... mostly in that I feel no need to clarify my position or slap a label on it. I'm not committed to any position. The degree to which I believe in "the divine" is free to shift wildly in response to context. I'm not required to be consistent, but I won't accept someone else's answer just to fit in, either.
But all that's irrelevant to this discussion. Has nothing to do with any gods.
All that said, there actually does seem to be a natural human tendency to reach out to the divine. I stop short of trying to explain that. But I will acknowledge I have it. I sure as hell won't accept somebody else's explanation when I know damned well they don't know any more than I do about it. Even if there is a God, what makes you think you know more about Him than I do? Ancient shepherds' scribbles? Nonsense!