UndercoverElephant
Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2002
- Messages
- 9,058
Let's make it simple, UE: is "not caused" the opposite of "caused" ?
That's right, yes. It does not follow that "random" is the opposite of "determined."
Let's make it simple, UE: is "not caused" the opposite of "caused" ?
I noticed you dodged those points, UE.
T(X) means the time at which X occurs. B is the action, A is you, C is what determines you.I'm sorry, but you'll need to translate that into English for me, because I don't know what your symbols are supposed to mean.
Alright... this implies that you're not supported by QM. That would mean you need support--in this case, I'm only asking for a very basic level of support--what problem it actually solves. Why do you need retrocausality in the first place--what does it specifically get you?I don't need QM to provide the mechanism. I only need QM to not rule it out.
That is not the case--you're confusing your own case for retrocausality with free will. What I am saying is that you are lacking in a reason to appeal to retrocausality in the first place. With regards to QM, there's no specific support--just a possibility. With regards to information transfer, there's no current reason to suspect that it is happening. With respect to your argument for free will, we're lacking a problem that it solves.You seem to be saying that no current interpretation of QM actually specifies a mechanism for free will, but that it's not impossible that some future version could.
An indetermined event, or whatever, cannot exhibit a definite order in any way, shape or form. Because that definite order in and on itself asserts some sort of cause, asserts that there are dependencies. If you want to have an ordered sequence of numbers and the principle by which they are ordered is "from smallest to largest" you'll get 123456789...
And with your purpose or intention ... There is always something which has the intention so-and-so. Or conversely, the intention so-and-so is held by something. You have no such something:
How can someting be non-determined and non-random? It can be so if it is an originatory act of will. It's non-random because it was intentionally willed, NOT because it was made inevitable by antecedent causes, and it's non-determined because it was not inevitable.
"It" is originatory. "It" is also intentionally willed. By? Oh, sorry, "It" is originatory. Watch where you tread. Just stuffing the word "intention" or "will" in there somewhere doesn't get you anywhere.
Something can have the intention so-and-so. The intention so-and-so does then depends on the something, though.
If some intention is said to be my intention, then that intention better depend on anything that I am. If that intention is not a consequence of anything that I am, then I claim no property. If I am not the cause of my intention the I can claim no property.
On top of that, there are usages of the word random where it does mean exactly the same as indetermined. What else do you think makes quantum events random?
What else do you think makes a fair coin toss random?
T(X) means the time at which X occurs. B is the action, A is you, C is what determines you.
Alright... this implies that you're not supported by QM. That would mean you need support--in this case, I'm only asking for a very basic level the same--what problem it actually solves.
Why do you need retrocausality in the first place--what does it specifically get you?
That is not the case--you're confusing your own case for retrocausality with free will. What I am saying is that you are lacking in a reason to appeal to retrocausality in the first place. With regards to QM, there's no specific support--just a possibility. With regards to information transfer, there's no current reason to suspect that it is happening. With respect to your argument for free will, we're lacking a problem that it solves.
In other words, there doesn't seem to be any useful reason to introduce retrocausality--it doesn't derive from observation...
I have the right to think you're full of it until you show me otherwise. What problem does it solve?No problem which exists for you. It solves some problems I have in accounting for all of the evidence available to me.
Did you even read my post?I don't "need" retrocausality. I have witnessed retrocausality.
And lacking that, I officially claim that you're full of it. Now I'm officially asking you to prove that I'm an idiot for claiming that.You are lacking a problem that it solves.
Now those are weasel words. Your entire last response would have been better not posted--there was essentially no information in it.It does for me.
I don't "need" retrocausality. I have witnessed retrocausality. Had I not witnessed it, it probably would not appear in any of my speculations.
In other words, I am not really introducing retrocausality as the solution to a problem at all. I'm introducing it because I think I've directly experienced it,
I don't know... I'm starting to think there might be something to his retrocausality. Maybe UE's theory makes successful postdictions.How can you honestly be so confident in something because "you think you've directly experienced it"?
I think I've mentioned this before but there is a double-meaning to the word "I" here which is causing a problem. "I" can be taken to mean "my body", "my mind" or "my I". Usually it doesn't matter. In this case it absolutely matters, because the intention in question when we are talking about free will is only "my" intention if we are talking about the last of these forms of "I". If the "I" is understood as "my body" or "the content of my mind" (i.e. "my thoughts") then it isn't free will. It's unfree will. For it to be free will, the intention has to be "owned" by the "I", not the mind/body. If you think about the religious connotations of free will, the above should make perfect sense. It is nonsense from a materialistic point of view. Some materialists don't even acknowledge the existence of mind, so "I" has to always mean "my body" to those people. Those quasi-dualistic materialists who acknowledge they have minds do not acknowledge the existence of any metaphysical "I" or human subject.
So you both claim ownership of this intent and don't claim ownership depending on what you mean by "I".
I don't believe they are truly random. I think they are being determined via hidden mechanisms/variables. My worldview is consistent with there being no such thing as true randomness.
Well, since coin tosses are determined by the laws of physics, I don't really see how this supports your case.
I have the right to think you're full of it until you show me otherwise. What problem does it solve?
Did you even read my post?
And lacking that, I officially claim that you're full of it. Now I'm officially asking you to prove that I'm an idiot for claiming that.
That's right, yes. It does not follow that "random" is the opposite of "determined."
I believe it is possible for something to be the cause of something else, for that thing not to be caused by anything else, but for that thing also not to be random, because it is intentional.
In other words, for me, the opposite of "determined" is "non-determined", where "non-determined" can mean either random or an intentional act of will.
Within the scope of the rest of my belief system, this makes perfect sense. It doesn't make sense to you because you are a materialist and materialism has no place for "intentional acts of will." Under a materialistic ontology there can be no such thing.
You are trying to define free will out of existence
This is also getting silly. I believe I have witnessed something that most people here would classify as paranormal and don't believe happens (they're skeptics, after all.) I am not claiming I can prove that this happened, since it was a subjective experience in the first place and I can't recreate/repeat it anyway. If you want to call me "full of it" for saying this then that is your business. What do you expect me to do in response? Refuse to believe my own experiences?
I am not so sure if you mean it, but a lot of that sounds as if you were busily distributing property rights to certain terminology. It is not as if free will were owned by the religious, or something.![]()
Oh, when I speak of coin tosses I have more of a statistical (or stochastic?) conception in mind. Not coin tosses that happen in the real world, but coin tosses that serve as illustration in statistical problems. And such a fair coin toss has a probability of 1/2 for either side, and there is nothing that affects this. By definition. Sometimes I point out what I have in mind, sometimes I sweep it under the rug.
How can you honestly be so confident in something because "you think you've directly experienced it"?
Would you apply that same criteria to "thinking you saw a shadow" on a night when you had a couple drinks, or "thinking you heard a creepy whisper in the bathroom" when you just came home from seeing a scary movie?
I don't know... I'm starting to think there might be something to his retrocausality. Maybe UE's theory makes successful postdictions.
Yes it is. Thanks for realizing it.This is also getting silly.
Don't care. Pay attention to this thread.I believe
Don't care. Pay attention to what I'm asking for, and your claims in this thread.I am not claiming I can prove that this happened,
Evasion.If you want to call me "full of it" for saying this then that is your business.
I have no expectations. But I clearly stated what I'm looking for. Your defense isn't an explanation of why retrocausality has anything to do with free will.What do you expect me to do in response?
You fail to understand what the issue is. You're trying to explain free will using retrocausality. Your explanation in itself is impotentRefuse to believe my own experiences?
That's perpetually true about everything, and is also perpetually useless.All I am going to say in response to you is that you don't have any grounds for being absolutely certain that I'm lying or deluded.
You forget that it also does not explain anything.What I am suggesting breaks no laws of physics and does not involve any logical contradictions.
Irrelevant. Your explanation is also incomplete. It's missing a problem you're solving.What it does suggest is that the materialistic/skeptic/deterministic way of looking at things is an incomplete picture of reality.
Because you've yet to give me something to disagree with, and you seem to refuse to do so. You're distracting yourself around the question. I'm not asking you for evidence... I'm asking you for coherency--a connection at all.Why can't you just agree to disagree with me?
All I ask for is that if you place something into a public forum, you recognize that you are implicitly subjecting it for comments and criticism, and allow me to comment and criticise it. And frankly, even if you don't allow it, you don't quite have a choice anyway.All I ask is that I be allowed to believe in the validity of my own personal experiences provided they don't contradict science or other things that I have previously stated that I believe.
UE: Why don't you just stop there? Stop with the nonsensical philosophy and sad attempts at logic?For exactly the same reason you can honestly be so confident when you say "I have a splitting headache!"
The "think" was only there out of convention. I know damned well I experienced it. It was a poor use of language, actually. It would have been better without the "think."
Then I suppose the question becomes: what do YOU mean by "random" and what do you mean by "determined".
That doesn't make any sense to me. What do you mean by "intent" if not a previous cause ?
Yes, I understand that. It's also incoherent, because whenever you tried to describe what an act of will is, you invariably refer to caused and uncaused events.
For exactly the same reason you can honestly be so confident when you say "I have a splitting headache!"
Yes, actually, that is exactly what you should be doing, and refusing to do so is precisely the root of the argument, here.