Flatworm said:
"I see no reason (I find it irrational) to accept the premise or argument that intent can emanate from an effect (the body of man) that was itself born/yielded from processes/effects without any intent in themselves."
In other words, you cannot prove it, but simply want us to take it as axiomatic.
The statement was meant to be read as a whole. You omitted the second half of the statement, which qualifies the first:-
"Without a primal-cause (a source of absolute free-will), intent cannot exist, since fundamentally, intent must originate from a source with absolute free-will. Afterall, an entity cannot intend to do anything by itself unless somehow, it possesses free-will."
So, as a whole, my statement explains why I see no reason to accept the premise or argument that... etc..
"Without a primal-cause (a source of absolute free-will), intent cannot exist, since fundamentally, intent must originate from a source with absolute free-will."
Let me guess- "absolute free will" is different from normal free will, and this is another unproven axiom that you expect us to just accept.
A primal-cause that is the source of any intent within existence, has absolute free-will, by default.
"Afterall, an entity cannot intend to do anything by itself unless somehow, it possesses free-will."
I agree with this statement. However, that doesn't stop said entity from arising from a system without intent.
You need to explain. How can a system possessing intent, be the product of an embracing system possessing none (we assume) whatsoever?
The question is applicable to all human characteristics. For example, how can a system possessing
desire, be the product of an embracing system possessing none (we assume) whatsoever?
So please bear this in mind when responding.
But they are not a product of IP addresses, which is the point. I was showing that it is not true in general that an entity with attribute X can only arise from a system with attribute X.
IP addresses are products of our minds, first & foremost. So, IP addresses are the products of a mind that has knowledge about IP addresses.
Fine, now how do we determine if some other mind posesses intent, without being privy to its inner thought processes?
Well, why not ask that entity: "Oy guv'nor... did you consciously intend to do X, or did you do it without thinking?"
Guvnor's possible responses:-
(1) Grunt.
(2) He eats you.
(3) He doesn't know what X is or whether he did it.
(4) He says: "Of course I intended to do it.".
Ask me about this post. I will not grunt or eat you, and will understand the question.
I'm sorry, but it does matter. It is important in demonstrating there is no sharp distinction between intent and instinct, and consequently lends support to a naturalistic origin for intent.
I only need to prove the existence of
any intent, for my argument to be valid. So, regardless of what happens to animals, I claim that humans consciously choose specific direction of action - if only some of the time.
I'm aware that some human actions are instinctive. But not all.