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Franko-Wraith
I mean that Free-Will comes from Infinity. This is stupid, Franko. I have explained exactly what this means. What is the point in continually asking me to 'explain' it, when it has already been explained, and I have already told you that there is no more explanation possible unless you ask me a more specific question. What exactly do you not understand, given what has already been said?
I get the feeling there is some particular question you want answered but you don't actually want to ask it.

Peskanov :
I think the problem comes down to the "Uncaused cause". Free Will can be the cause of other things, but it cannot be caused itself, or it is not free.
Everything breaks down at Infinity. Whether you wish to label this as irrational is your choice. I don't see it as irrational to trace back the Infinite Regression to Infinity itself.
Some of my beliefs depend on subjective personal experience which provided personal evidence for both the existence of Free Will and the possibility that consciousness can transcend quantum randomness and defy the laws of probability, but only in certain very specific situations. Thus it is not dogma from my point of view, any more than it would be dogmatic for somebody who had actually experienced a visit from aliens to believe in aliens. But my subjective experiences cannot demonstrate this to you and are of no use in this debate. However, there are some highly contraversial results from the people at PEAR which suggest that consciousness can indeed influence quantum probablity. These results are hotly disputed by hardline materialistic skeptics, but I can't help but wonder whether this is also driven by a line of reasoning that goes :
1) Materialism must be true.
2) Therefore consciousness cannot influence quantum probabalistic outcomes.
3) Therefore the people at PEAR are either deliberately falsifying their results or are just incompetent.
4) Therefore there is no evidence that consciousness can influence quantum probablistic outcomes.
Get rid of (1), which is an assumption, and the PEAR results warrant a much closer look, which is why they are so controversial and draw so much interest. I stopped arguing with people who claim (2), (3) or (4) a long time ago and spent my efforts concentrating on (1), which IMO causes a flawed line of reasoning in its wake.
The quality is Infiniteness. I apologise for not being able to give a more precise answer. The entity which posesses Free Will is Infinity itself. I think we are stuck going round in a loop.
By 'causal' do you mean "Is caused by" or "Is the cause of"?
Free Will must be an Uncaused Cause, or it is not Free. All other causes are themselves caused. This is this the root of the problem I think.
Even if I have Free Will it doesn't mean I can defy the law of gravity and fly. What is 'freedom' anyway?
We should not understate the place this question takes on the hierarchy of philosophical questions. IMO Free Will is the last thing you can make sense of in philosophy, and as you do so you cross the border into religion. I believe you have to figure out many other things before you can even understand the question properly.
Geoff.
Do you mind explaining what you mean by Free-will comes from Infinity ?
I mean that Free-Will comes from Infinity. This is stupid, Franko. I have explained exactly what this means. What is the point in continually asking me to 'explain' it, when it has already been explained, and I have already told you that there is no more explanation possible unless you ask me a more specific question. What exactly do you not understand, given what has already been said?
I get the feeling there is some particular question you want answered but you don't actually want to ask it.
Peskanov :
I don't understand why don't you want to accept random and acausal as the same.
I suspect that you accept free will as acausal, but not as lacking purpose. Could this be the problem?
I think the problem comes down to the "Uncaused cause". Free Will can be the cause of other things, but it cannot be caused itself, or it is not free.
Infinitine regression = infinite chain of causal events; unconceivable, but rational, I think.
Uncaused Cause to be Infinity = irrational?
Everything breaks down at Infinity. Whether you wish to label this as irrational is your choice. I don't see it as irrational to trace back the Infinite Regression to Infinity itself.
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quote:
Free Will is not quantum randomness. Free Will and randomness are not the same thing...
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IMO, the result of my experiment is that what you are saying here is dogmatic.
With free will you define a source of acausal events.
The QM defines a source of acausal events.
You assert that these 2 sources are not the same, and define the QM events to be just the channel, not the source. Why? If you don't take evidence from somewhere we are in dogma territory.
Some of my beliefs depend on subjective personal experience which provided personal evidence for both the existence of Free Will and the possibility that consciousness can transcend quantum randomness and defy the laws of probability, but only in certain very specific situations. Thus it is not dogma from my point of view, any more than it would be dogmatic for somebody who had actually experienced a visit from aliens to believe in aliens. But my subjective experiences cannot demonstrate this to you and are of no use in this debate. However, there are some highly contraversial results from the people at PEAR which suggest that consciousness can indeed influence quantum probablity. These results are hotly disputed by hardline materialistic skeptics, but I can't help but wonder whether this is also driven by a line of reasoning that goes :
1) Materialism must be true.
2) Therefore consciousness cannot influence quantum probabalistic outcomes.
3) Therefore the people at PEAR are either deliberately falsifying their results or are just incompetent.
4) Therefore there is no evidence that consciousness can influence quantum probablistic outcomes.
Get rid of (1), which is an assumption, and the PEAR results warrant a much closer look, which is why they are so controversial and draw so much interest. I stopped arguing with people who claim (2), (3) or (4) a long time ago and spent my efforts concentrating on (1), which IMO causes a flawed line of reasoning in its wake.
You MUST find some quality which separates both phenomena, you must find a quality in free will not present in the QM model.
The quality is Infiniteness. I apologise for not being able to give a more precise answer. The entity which posesses Free Will is Infinity itself. I think we are stuck going round in a loop.
As I said earlier, you are invited to bring other terminology, or other semantics. I don't think I am forcing meanings, still we are all biased in some direction...
By 'causal' do you mean "Is caused by" or "Is the cause of"?
Free Will must be an Uncaused Cause, or it is not Free. All other causes are themselves caused. This is this the root of the problem I think.
Talking about semantics, it think it is time to speak about what I think it's the root of the problem: the definition of "free will".
Thinking about the meaning and use of "free", it turns I find that "free" is used to talk about the lack of a restriction (or a set of restrictions). It's important to tell that these restrictions are often implicit on the context.
"Free entrance" refer to a payment restriction.
"The wagon is running free" could refer to a failure of brakes, which restricted it's movement in the rail. Still nobody says that the wagon is evading the rail, the physics model, or even causality!
In any use of "free" you will find a finite, understable context, which describes some restrictions, but still has others present.
Whe we create the term "free will", why are we trying to add ALL restrictions in the context? I can't think of any other use of "free" which is taken to that extreme. What evidence is making us think of an unlimited "will"? I can observe some restrictions in my will, and in other will as well.
Even if I have Free Will it doesn't mean I can defy the law of gravity and fly. What is 'freedom' anyway?
We should not understate the place this question takes on the hierarchy of philosophical questions. IMO Free Will is the last thing you can make sense of in philosophy, and as you do so you cross the border into religion. I believe you have to figure out many other things before you can even understand the question properly.
Geoff.