Has anyone ever understood anything you said, no matter how simply you put it?No, because you fail to understand anything no matter how simply I put it.
Has anyone ever understood anything you said, no matter how simply you put it?No, because you fail to understand anything no matter how simply I put it.
Has anyone ever understood anything you said, no matter how simply you put it?
Read again my last post, if you really really want to contribute, do yourself (and the few readers you might have) a favor and STUDY philosophy in an university.
Appeal to emotionInteresting Ian said:If just one person reads my contributions and thinks, "well he's really passionate about these issues, maybe there is a grain of truth in what he says. Maybe what the skeptics say is not so straightforwardly obvious after all".
Except this is not a court of law; reasonable doubt does not cut it. If you want to show that this supposed gri-gris we share is wrong, you're going to have to prove you have a better methodology. Better wo/men than you have tried and failed.Interesting Ian said:If it raises a question of doubt regarding the skeptical/materialist Weltanschauung, then that is surely to be desired.
If you're saying that the world works according to your beliefs and, ergo, our worldview is wrong, you're darn right you're making a claim.Interesting Ian said:What exactly do you mean by a claim? I've certainly made no assertions about anything. That's more in the habit of my opponents. Are beliefs a claim?
Even when I take my time and explain as simply as possible it certainly seems true that skeptics don't appear to understand me. I don't think non-skeptics have these difficulties.
I've pasted in a bit from my forthcoming website explaining what free will is in this very thread. Do you and other skeptics on here not understand it? If so there's absolutely nothing I can do about that since I've took the trouble to explain it as simply as I possibly could.
Ian, your opinions and ideas are extremely naive. For crying out loud. Think about it, are we ALL really stupid, or maybe we simply see your ideas as something of little importance?
Read again my last post, if you really really want to contribute, do yourself (and the few readers you might have) a favor and STUDY philosophy in an university.
That's because you're describing beliefs, which are necessarily mushy and vague. If the ideas were more concrete, they would almost certainly involve evidence.Ian said:No, because you fail to understand anything no matter how simply I put it.
That's because you're describing beliefs, which are necessarily mushy and vague. If the ideas were more concrete, they would almost certainly involve evidence.
For example, I fail to understand your concept of free will because you have absolutely no explanation for it.
You simply say it's your will to do something, with no mechanistic underpinnings. There's no content. There is nothing to grok, nothing to understand, nothing to turn about in my head and study.
For example, I fail to understand your concept of free will because you have absolutely no explanation for it.
That doesn't follow. My concept of free will does not require any explanation. It's simply the case that mental causality exists. There is no more to explain than a materialist being required to explain how physical causality works.
That doesn't follow. My concept of free will does not require any explanation. It's simply the case that mental causality exists. There is no more to explain than a materialist being required to explain how physical causality works.
Free will is very easy to understand -- a 5 year old understands it. Reconciling it with the idea that the whole world is described by physical laws is the problem.
Indeed, most forms of magic are very easy to understand. You wave your wand, and the frog turns into a prince. And that's why most people above the age of 5 reject the idea of magic that does not require -- or indeed, permit -- any form of explanation.
But it does appear to work - that's exactly the point. It appears to work even to adults.No. They reject it because it doesn't appear to work.
Well, now you've done gone and shot yourself in the foot. I would be perfectly happy if you said mental causality is equivalent to physical causality, because then I could just assume they were two names for the same thing. But you say "free mental causality exists," which is an oxymoron. Materialists do not deny a mechanism connecting one physical event to another, but you deny a mechanism connecting mental events to decisions.Ian said:That doesn't follow. My concept of free will does not require any explanation. It's simply the case that mental causality exists. There is no more to explain than a materialist being required to explain how physical causality works.
I do not understand how mental events lead to decision making. I do not understand by what processes my will is formed.I have absolutely no idea what you fail to understand about free will.
Well, now you've done gone and shot yourself in the foot. I would be perfectly happy if you said mental causality is equivalent to physical causality, because then I could just assume they were two names for the same thing. But you say "free mental causality exists," which is an oxymoron.
Materialists do not deny a mechanism connecting one physical event to another, but you deny a mechanism connecting mental events to decisions.
I do not understand how mental events lead to decision making.
I do not understand by what processes my will is formed.
Same way "libertarian free will" differs from "compatibilist free will," so you had better tell me. As I said, I don't understand it.Ian said:How does "free mental causality" differ from "non-free mental causality"?
I said I would agree that "mental causality simply exists," too. But you're using this causality as an excuse to avoid all the complexity concerning how mental monism operates.That's not the issue. You can say that you can specify a mechanism whereby "z" results from "a" by "a" causing "b", and "b" causing "c" . . . etc. But you cannot expect an answer by asking how "a" causes "b" (eg how does a billiard ball move after another impacts on it). Physical causality simply exists. You're simply confused when you ask what is the mechanism whereby causality works. It's a basic existent whether we have in mind physical causality, or mental causality. There is no mechanism. It's just the way the world is. And if we have free will then that's just the way the world is.
Here is an example of how you're avoiding the hard work. This is equivalent to neurophysiologist saying "Through your consciousness initiating events in other parts of the brain via neural connections" as the sum total of his explanation of decision making behavior. It's vapid, content-free, and uninteresting. It's proof by drawing a blank.Ian said:Through your consciousness initiating events in the brain via psychokinesis.
Boy am I really looking forward to not reading a website with tons of gibberish like this on it.Since I do not even understand what "free mental causality" is I can confidently state that I certainly did not say this....
{And later in the same post}
...Through you consciousness initiating events in the brain via psychokinesis.
By the dictates of the self.