Iacchus said:Maybe it [glowing hands of clocks] has something to do with anti-matter, which is still a "some"-thing?
No, the Invisible Pink Unicorn makes them glow, but in an intricate random nondeterministic manner.
Iacchus said:Maybe it [glowing hands of clocks] has something to do with anti-matter, which is still a "some"-thing?
Oops! You have an "if" at the start of that sentence. That means that if the rest of the sentence is to stand, you have to prove that there is no such thing as true randomness.Iacchus said:If there is no such thing as true randomness, how can we get away from the fact that things don't happen by chance and, that everything happens according to its design?
Evidence?Indeed, there was never a time when there was ever nothing.
Irrelevant, and not true.Also, it suggest's [sic] there is no less structure in the Universe today than there has always been.
Just because you can't understand how this can have arisen without a designer, it doesn't mean that it can't have happened. You have just advanced an argument from ignorance (an unlimited resource, I believe).Indeed, how much structure do we find in a single seed? Which of course to me, suggests the work of something extremely intelligent, beyond the bounds of which we couldn't even begin to describe ... I guess?
I would tend to agree with Jan's position.jan said:...
Why is it impossible to have the freedom to make choices and be a completely deterministic system?
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I guess we can postpone this discussion until we have evidence for the existence of free will.
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No, it's to do with radioactivity.Iacchus said:Maybe it has something to do with anti-matter, which is still a "some"-thing?
Obviously.Obviously I don't know enough about it.![]()
jan said:As I mentioned above, radioactive decay is considered to be "random as in quantum mechanics randomness". If you have a clock with hands glowing in the dark and look at it, you are observing some non-causational events. In fact, quite many of them.
The idea is this: whenever an event has several outcomes, the universe doesn't have to take a random pick, it just takes all possible outcomes and splits into several worlds, one for each possible outcome (which means that each worlds splits into myriads of worlds each moment).
Indeed, it's completely deterministic and not a bit random. It just appears to be random for an inhabitant of one of those resulting worlds (that is, us), since we observe only one out of all the possible outcomes.
Unfortunately, I am unable to tell you why Iacchus believes what he believes. Maybe you should note that he thinks that he is some kind of god (the god Dionysus, that is).
Independent of the external circumstances? What kind of choice would that be? I mean, whenever I make a choice, it has something to do with external circumstances. I assume what you mean is "not completely determined by external circumstances" (just some nitpicking, I guess).
Why is it impossible to have the freedom to make choices and be a completely deterministic system?
Assume you had free will until yesterday, but last night, during your sleep, you lost your free will. You continue to make decisions, but purely mechanical. Would you notice the difference? How? If there isn't any, why would you prefer to have free will?
I guess we can postpone this discussion until we have evidence for the existence of free will.
Why can't intelligent decision making be deterministic?
If it is deterministic, it can still be quite unpredictable.
I disagree. Greek mythology knows many instances where gods make decisions on behalf of humans and move their hearts to act this or that way.
Also, I seem to remember that Luther had some theory called "predeterminism", that means, it is known in advance whether you will be saved or damned, that is, it is determined how you will decide (accept or reject Jesus). Sounds pretty deterministic to me, but I'm not an expert in Luther's theology, so I might have got it wrong.
Since I still have problems to grasp how free will could be possible, I can't say much about that. But maybe it's just a lack of imagination on your part?
But we still have this dilemma: this other world either entirely follow rules, or it doesn't. So it's either deterministic, or random. As I said: it doesn't matter whether you argue within the physical world or within some other kind of world, the problem stays the same.
I think that is one possible interpretation. Another could be that the judicial system just tries to sort out which cases are better dealt with jail and which are better dealt with an asylum, and all this talk about "guilt" is just some kind of verbal decoration.
If I could show you that all human decisions boil down to some kind of very, very complicated mechanic that is completely deterministic, would you suggest to give up law and order? Why?
Iacchus said:If there is no such thing as true randomness, how can we get away from the fact that things don't happen by chance and, that everything happens according to its design?
Iacchus. Who else?Bri said:Who said that there is no such thing as true randomness?
Upchurch said:A Google of Hawking Radiation, named for Stephen Hawking who predicted its existance, will give you ample information about an observable effect of acausal quantum fluctuations. Well, I say "observable", but I mean it is detectable with instruments. It cannot be seen with the naked eye. Anyway, it is a reliably observed piece of evidence of an acausal event.
Many Worlds is only one interpretation, although I do find it the most fun.
There is a third variation of predictable/unpredictable, which I think is more aptly applied to QM.
JAK said:I would tend to agree with Jan's position.
Because of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, for any of us to predict our next behavior would be futile. We are victims of how we are, not masters of who we are. With such explanation, free will is the expression of the complex workings of our own minds (with or without spiritual influences). It is deterministic by virtue of natural laws by which it abides. It is "free will" by virtue of our inability to predict the behaviors.
I believe it is necessary to point out that deterministic behavior is not "fated" behavior. We are affected (altered) by the environment. In turn, we affect (alter) the environment. As a result, our behavior is a dynamic dance with our partner being the environment. The Uncertainty Principle prevents exacting predictions. The more complex the machinery and interactions with the environment, the poorer the predictability.
Finally, I believe that most people would prefer a determinsitic basis for "free will". Deterministic implies "systematic". In other words, you can count on your personality and character traits to stay intact throughout your lifetime. If this were not true, you could be an avid Christian one day and a "born again" atheist the next. These could alternate daily in a "Dr. Jeckle and Mr. Hyde" fashion. Similarly, all of your interests would become volatile. There would be nothing that would be internally consistent about who you are. Your personality/character would be a rollercoaster of dramatic changes from year to year, month to month, day to day, hour to hour, even moment to moment. You would become unreliable to anyone including yourself.
We want to be able to rely on ourselves. We want something to be internally consistent. And to be reliable, to be consistent, there must be something systematic at some level within our being. And anything which is systematic, can be called deterministic.
Bri said:What non-causational events am I observing?
Thank you for the explanation. That was my assumption of what the idea was, but is it actually random which of the multiple realities we actually end up in, or does it only seem to be from our perspective?
Because the freedom to make choices requires that there are different choices to make and different possible outcomes from which one chooses freely. In a completely deterministic system, the outcome is completely determined by prior causes so there is only one possible outcome.
I'm not sure that I would notice a difference, but yes I think that I would prefer to have free will. It's sort of like that scene in "The Matrix," where the guy says that even though he knows the steak doesn't exist, he still prefers it to reality. But in this case reality and the illusion are exactly the same. If the experiences are identical, I would probably prefer to actually have free will rather than just the illusion of having free will.
There is some scientific evidence that our brains are hardwired to believe we have free will, so it's very possible that my desire to have free will is completely beyond my control. The theory is that the belief in free will might be necessary to our survival, even if it's only an illusion.
As I attempted to explain above, decision-making (intelligent or otherwise) cannot be deterministic. Decision making requires choices, and if determinism is true there are no choices.
No fair! Now you're using a different definition of "unpredictable." The very definition of determinism is that a certain cause always has the same predictable effect. Yes, determinism can be complex, and can appear to be free choice, but it isn't free choice.
A god stepping in and making a decision on your behalf doesn't take away your free will. It only takes away your freedom to make that decision.
Perhaps! Please clarify what you're suggesting might be a lack of imagination on my part.
Your argument seems to assume that the absence of determinism is randomness. Is that correct, and if so why?
What do you mean "better dealt with" and what do you mean by "verbal decoration?"
I don't know. However, I would imagine that it if were known to everyone that everything is completely deterministic, then it would be a valid defense to say that you killed the guy because you had no choice. In our judicial system, we don't punish people for doing things they have no control over and to do so would be inethical.
Iacchus said:That's King Tut to you.![]()
Well, obviously I haven't been "focusing" on you either.
Is that right cousin? Of course my reference to cousin Pentheus here -- who, was most notable for his "blind rationalism" --
is not just to you.
So I wouldn't take it personally. But then again, it sounds like you already have. [/B]
Didn't mean to beat a dead horse, it's just that I've got this degree and it's just sitting there collecting dust...Bri said:Thanks, I'll check it out. I will admit now that I have been corrected on the general acceptance of quantum theory compared to causation/determinism!
Both. The complexity is astronomical. Yet, even if we could get a grip on the complexity, at the lowest level, our attempt to "get a grip on it" alters the structure, alters the system, and alters the outcome. By our own meddling, we change whatever "natural" behavior would occur.Bri said:I will admit that I'm not familiar with the Uncertainty Principle. Are you saying that we are currently (because of our inability to know all the variables and calculate all the effects of all of the causes) unable to predict our next behavior or are you saying that our next behavior is truly unpredictable? In other words, are you just saying that it's very complex, or are you saying that it's random?
In astronomy, there is the "two body problem", whereby the motion of two interacting celestial objects can be predicted. And there is the "three body problem" which has escaped modern mathematics in predictability. Even so, in both cases, the celestial bodies are moving according to known laws of physics. Thus, you have "determinism" in that a certain cause (known and predictable laws of physics) have the same predictable effect (on any isolated object). Yet, enough is unknown about physics to explain complex interactions. By escaping prediction, the interactions appear random to some degree.Bri said:...
Determinism dictates that a certain cause will always have the same predictable effect, which in effect does seem to mean "fated." Randomness would perhaps make it something other than "fated," but would preclude determinism. Neither allows us to make actual choices.
If I implied that "free will" would cause you to fall apart, forgive me. That is not what I intended to convey. I meant to say that "free will" is the expression of each of us as unique systems. Yet, each of us has an internal system which, though guided by laws of nature, are too complex to understand. Our behaviors, thus, are an expression of our internal make-up. In fact, our internal make-up forces the choices we make.Bri said:...
Not necessarily. You would have the ability to become unreliable, but free will doesn't mean that you would necessarily fall apart. You are still influenced by your environment, and you still store information internally, and there is still internal consistancy.
All thoughts and emotions are effects which are caused by thermodynamical and other events in a living organism. However, some events run counter to others. Because a multitude of events happen simutaneously within the organism, each event, though deterministic in itself, is only one of many, many influences upon a final decision.Bri said:...
Determinism means that an effect is 100% determined by a cause, not just influenced by it. There is a difference between determinism and influence. Choice doesn't preclude influence, but it does seem to preclude determinism.
How does systematic mean deterministic, and why can't something be systematic without being deterministic?
-Bri
jan said:Bri, I am going to bed, so don't expect any further replies today. And don't expect the replies below to be very thought-through...
You see radioactive decay.
In each world, there is one Bri asking "why did I end in this world, and not some other?"
I would say you have a very rigid definition of freedom. Basically it seems to be the same as the ability to entertain free will ("ambitious brand"). I tried to use "freedom to make choices" as a term that does not entail free will.
Main Entry: free will
Function: noun
1 : voluntary choice or decision (I do this of my own free will)
2 : freedom of humans to make choices that are not determined by prior causes or by divine intervention
Imagine a chess computer that is completely deterministic. If you have a copy of the computer, you can predict its moves (by looking how this twin decided). Nevertheless, there is a certain meaning of "freedom to make choices" that could allow us to apply this notion to that computer: we are not forcing the computer at gun point to make this or that move. There is no external force, outside its box, that forces the computer. Admitted, the computer is forced to behave as the currents on its main board dictate, so the computer is not free in another sense of that term. Obviously, this computer doesn't have free will.
But if the experiences are the same, then what is the actual difference?
Sounds interesting. Do you have a link at hand?
I give you some choice. You choose. But if we look close enough, we see that your choice wasn't real, it just appeared to be a choice, like the aforementioned chess computer only appeared to make choices.
But then, why should we look that close? If we have to resort to the behavior of single atoms, we will never be able to say anything at all about your mode of decision-making, since this level is much too fine-grained.
I would say it is reasonable to say that the chess computer makes decisions. It is very cumbersome always to add "it appears to make decisions, but you know, it's all just wires and current".
That's why I said "quite unpredictable", and not just "unpredictable". But I agree that I could have been clearer. The thing is, given the complexity of the human brain together with quantum fuzziness, it is likely that it will never be able to predict the calculations of the human brain, even if there is no free will. So if it is just unpredictability that you want, you already got that.
And if it is just the ability to be convicted to jail, well, innocent people have been convicted to jail as well. You don't need free will for that.
So, this time, she had her free will, but not the freedom to do as she wanted to do. But notice that she only has free will when the gods are absent; and they are absent if no important decision is at stake. That is, she has free will with regard to minor decisions, but no free will about the real big issues. As Homer has Menelaus saying it: "Then thou camest thither, and it must be that thou wast bidden by some god".
You say that if there is free will, it must be given by some god. But if there is free will, there could be thousands of reasons for it. You would have to show that a god is the only possible source of free will.
Perhaps it is just a lack of imagination on my part. If something doesn't obey laws, how should we call it? I would say JAK said some interesting things about this.
If your purpose is to maximize happiness, it seems more or less inevitable to put some people in jail, since the net effect of them being free and unpunished on the overall happiness is negative. But maybe they are "innocent" in the sense that there is no free will.
I'm not sure if I want to argue that way. I just mentioned it to show that there are several possibilities. I would prefer to argue that you are, in an admittedly limited sense, able to make decisions even without genuine free will, and that's enough to make the concept of responsibility work.
After all, responsibility seems to be a matter of degree. It's not that drugs switch of your ability to make decisions completely. It's just that those decisions you make while drugged might become unlike the decisions you make while being sober. And if you commit a crime while on drugs, it sounds reasonable to request from you to abstain from drugs in the future. Ad even force you to. Even if you are considered to be innocent.
Perhaps there is no free will, and we do punish people, although the laws of physics made them behave like they behaved?
No, I do believe "God" is the source of free will and, the fact that all things are deterministic beyond that, shows the allegience of everything (by varying degree) to the original cause. As for the notion of "multiverses," this seems like another way of spelling out omniscience which, would be indicative to the mind of God. Whereas to the degree that one is conscious (hence closer to the mind of God), one has a greater capacity of free will. Which is to say, free will is very much linked to consciousness ... whereas everything else (in the physical sense) is deterministic.Bri said:On the other hand, it seems that causation may actually disprove the existance of God, especially the type of God that a lot of people believe in nowadays, such as a God who granted Adam and Eve free will in the Garden of Eden. Iacchus might want to consider a different approach if he's trying to prove that God exists.
Let me get this straight:Iacchus said:No, I do believe "God" is the source of free will and, the fact that all things are deterministic beyond that, shows the allegience of everything (by varying degree) to the original cause. As for the notion of "multiverses," this seems like another way of spelling out omniscience which, would be indicative to the mind of God. Whereas to the degree that one is conscious (hence closer to the mind of God), one has a greater capacity of free will. Which is to say, free will is very much linked to consciousness ... whereas everything else (in the physical sense) is deterministic.
You got it!Donks said:Let me get this straight:
You believe in free will.
You believe God is the source of free will.
You believe God is omniscient.
Is that right?
Do you have free will if God knows what you will do?Iacchus said:You got it!
We are extensions of God. His free will extends into us, as it does everything else.Donks said:Do you have free will if God knows what you will do?
Yet you didn't answer the question. Do you have free will if you are only free to do exactly what God knows you will do?Iacchus said:We are extensions of God. His free will extends into us, as it does everything else.