cooper1958nc
Student
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2007
- Messages
- 49
Nah, you are making a claim that demands extraordinary evidence, i.e. that brains are causal, even though people clearly do the unexpected all the time. So if someone is to claim that despite the internal observation of apparent freedom of action, and despite the objective inability to determine the antecedent "causes", one is nonetheless convinced because of some classical worldview or belief in a billiard ball universe, that the brain has to be causal, then it would seem they need to marshal the evidence. True, the behaviourists seem to want to deliver on this, and they think they have found the evidence. Maybe so, maybe not. I think not, actually, but it is a fair game.