when it saves someone (or many) from a greater hurt. Even in that case it not always is, but sometimes violence is justified, unless you are a very strict Kantian perhaps. — Tobias
It's difficult to imagine it. Whatever the initial conditions, whatever the strength of gravity, if you have a partioned box with gas in one side and a vacuum in the other, and you remove the partition, there are many more configurations where the gas occupies the whole box than where it stays in its original side, and one would expect this equilibrium to be attained after a while. This would suggest that it is independent of first causes — Kenosha Kid
It might be dependent on reference frame though. — Kenosha Kid
Determinism isn't an event though. Effects need prior causes. Determinism doesn't. — Kenosha Kid
In this way, no prior cause is needed for determinism, as it's an emergent characteristic from another, more fundamental version of the principle of least action (sum over histories, essentially the integration of action over all possible paths). — Kenosha Kid
Is it right? You tell me. — Outlander
Determinism doesn't verify anything at all, it's not in assurance — Kenosha Kid
By definition, no. Determinism covers deterministic process only. — Kenosha Kid
where is this principle situated, and how does it determine? Is there some mad Principle Puppeteer directing processes with strings? — Raymond
It says "go with the theory with the least free parameters". 2 is twice as many as 1. — Kenosha Kid
Just checking your arithmetic here. (2) consists of two things. (1) just one thing. To clarify, you're going on record that two things is simpler than one thing, yes? — Kenosha Kid
Occam's razor chooses the simplest explanation for the whole. Which is simpler?
1. Determinism.
2. Determinism + non-deterministic free will. — Kenosha Kid
A process unfolding, with or without possible consequences on processes somewhere around it... The very notion of determinism is a subjective feature we project on processes. — Raymond
No, it's funded by the second law of thermodynamics. You can choose to be ignorant about something (or do your own research in contemporary parlance), but it doesn't follow that all ignorance is voluntary. — Kenosha Kid
Does ethics make scientific/mathematical sense? — Agent Smith
As such, humans always make decisions in partial ignorance, leading (deterministically) to a high probability of suboptimal choices — Kenosha Kid
All I can say is human beings seem to violate some mathematical principle reducible to linearity (straigth lines). — Agent Smith
I'd say yes.So, what’s the answer? Does it make sense to hold people accountable for their actions given that there is no free will? — T Clark
You are ignorant in any highly detailed way, of your own way of being and survival. — schopenhauer1
Any deviation from linearity, in my humble opinion, can't be mathematical. — Agent Smith
Humans, it appears, can defy mathematical laws/principles. If I choose to, I needn't travel along a straight line from point A to point B. — Agent Smith
It's somewhat vague to say that community has intrinsic value. Comparative to what else? — Shawn
Those who call FreeWill an illusion or delusion, were encouraged by the Libet experiment, showing that the brain is prepared to act before the mind is even aware of choosing to act. — Gnomon
FreeWill is neither a "lie", nor a delusion, it's what makes humans unique among animals : the ability to change the future, and even to alter the course of evolutionary destiny with what we call Culture ; the result of collective free choices. :smile: — Gnomon
Yes, but is that not what environmentalism might offer? — Tobias
Well, what kind of positivity do you need? I think the ecological shift brings great possibilities and threats. One of the questions I am grappling with is the question whether ecological thinking can provide new ideals that can give us a unified sense of purpose. To me ecology is metaphysics, 'deus sive natura', but not thought from God as the main point of departure, but nature, natura sive deus. — Tobias
This type of environmentalism is modern day soteriology. — Tobias
Could it be, that your wish is not to find love, but to turn to be a giver, provider and protector? — god must be atheist
How would we know unless we do the appropriate analysis? — Agent Smith
Ignoramus: Someone who pretends they know something but acts as if they don't. — Tom Storm
I believe that people say what they mean. If Socrates said "I know nothing" he meant he knew nothing. — god must be atheist
Ignoramus: I do not want to know that (what) I do not know; therefore, 'illusions of knowledge' suffice – I'm content. (re "satisfied swine)" — 180 Proof
Now that I have love in my life, I think he stole the fire to keep his love in comfort -- no effort spared. — god must be atheist
We have confused technology with science and now have technological smarts but not wisdom. — Athena