No, because those events, as I explained in my previous post, are either global (the Big Bang) or statistically invariant. In the case of the Big Bang the conditions for its advent are completely unknown, and we cannot say it is statistically invariant because it is the one and only truly causeless event (in the sense that it could have no cause from within the system for obvious reasons). — Janus
In the case of microphysical events, they are statistically invariant, which points to the them being the result of the nature of the system itself. The problem is that the general tendency is to think only in terms of efficient causation. Microphysical events might have no causes more fundamental than themselves but may be the result of global 'formal' or 'final' constraints that come about only at a certain stage in the evolution of the system itself. — Janus
No, I agree, most typically the PSR implies the existence of a cause, whether known or not. — SophistiCat
The same is true for scientific explanations: once we adopt some theory as our explanatory framework, it does not matter for us whether the theory and it posits can be further reduced to a causeless ground of all being or some such; giving account of phenomena in terms of the theory counts as providing an explanation regardless. — SophistiCat
So whether the Big Bang is uncaused, self-causing, or caused by something unknowable, we are not precluded from conceiving it as an event in terms of its observed consequences. But it can only be understood in terms of its consequences, a fact which itself supports the PSR, it cannot be understood 'in itself'. So, in other words, events like the Big Bang or the decay of uranium atoms are conceivable in terms of their consequences, but not conceivable in themselves. — Janus
Again, this has nothing to do with my issue with you, which is that there's no point in bringing up the free will theorem. This just seems like a weird excuse to plug a favourite theory of yours. — Michael
OK, well I guess the authors meant something like "the choice is not the outcome of a function..." so it seems reasonable to think that the PSR does rule out free will in that sense. So, the next question for tom would be: why would it follow that science is not possible if every choice an experimenter makes must be the outcome of a function of some or all of the information accessible to him or her? — MetaphysicsNow
Just say that humans having free will falsifies the principle. — Michael
Notice the antecedent. The rest of the argument is irrelevant (on this issue) as the principle of sufficient reason has already been rejected from the start. — Michael
The FWT is a conditional theorem to the effect thatif there are uncaused events of one specific kind, then there are other uncaused events. — MetaphysicsNow
Probabilistic conceptions of causality attempt to keep some aspects of causality, but drop that specific conception of determinism, allowing that future states of systems have a probabilistic distribution, but are nevertheless in some significant sense caused by the existing state of the system, thus rendering causation compatible with (some interpretations of) QM. — MetaphysicsNow
Yes: take a look here for instance — MetaphysicsNow
Not really - there are probabilistic conceptions of causality that are perfectly compatible with QM. — MetaphysicsNow
Pseudo-random number generators are not truly random - their outputs are in principle predictable and explicable and at base a matter of cause and effect, and that feeds through into any measurements finally made on their basis that the measurements to take are "chosen" by such a machine. — MetaphysicsNow
Odd, perhaps, but if that's where a true principle or an apriori principle of thought or whatever it is taken to be leads, so be it: a principle that drives human discovery in one way or another is not to be discarded simply because it leads to apparently unpalatable results. — MetaphysicsNow
2. Every event has a cause — TheMadFool
2 and 3 seem to be saying the same thing. They too lead, inevitably, to a causal formulation of the Munchhausen trilemma. — TheMadFool
So, disproving or denying the PSR becomes a mere academic exercise having little effect on how we actually deal with knowledge seeking. — TheMadFool
You cannot refute a principle on the basis of an assumption which the principle (arguably) entails is false: that's called question begging. — MetaphysicsNow
That is true, but I thought your position was that the FWT refutes the PSR. It doesn't, and precisely because of the fact that the theorem is a conditional whose antecedent bears on the PSR, and they don't establish that the antecedent of their theorem is true. — MetaphysicsNow
The authors do absolutely nothing to establish that the antecedent is true, and do not even put any flesh on the bones of what they take to be "free will". — MetaphysicsNow
I have only skim read it - but as it stands my feeling is just to lump the authors into the category of competentent physicists but bumbling philosophers, and since the status of the PSR is a philosophical issue, they don't really have a great deal to contribute. — MetaphysicsNow
Admittedly I've only just started reading the article, but they appear to be helping themselves to the notion of free will, which is precisely one of the notions that the PSR bears upon, and if so, they are not so much falsifying the PSR but begging the question against it. I'll continue reading their paper, but the philosophical roughshod-riding they engage in at the begining gives me initial reason to doubt that they have anything philosophically cogent to contribute to the debate about the PSR. — MetaphysicsNow
Both Schopenhauer and Darwin can provide relatively irrefutable observational evidence for their respective assertions. And yet, modern biology operates upon the basis of the veracity of the theory of Evolution, whilst the 'Theory' of Determinism remains outside of the scope of mainstream thought. Even Philosophers do not accept that Determinism has been established or proven by Schopenhauer and others. — Marcus de Brun
How so? — charleton
Oh well, if I'd known that the Oxford University journal was silly I wouldn't have been citing it all these years — Pseudonym
This implies fatalism which is not true. Nothing is 'already' determined in the sense it is know. Things are determined by antecedent conditions. That does not imply anything 'already'.
Unless you believe in God. — charleton
You're missing the point of what I'm saying entirely. The simple fact is that some equally intelligent people have come to an alternative conclusion, as the paper I cited shows, meaning that nothing has been proven, it has only been theorised. — Pseudonym
No one has proven anything, it is a perfectly legitimatlt contested theorem — Pseudonym
No one has proven anything — Pseudonym
My view is that determinism must be true.
At the most basic level, things happen because they are caused by other things. — RepThatMerch22
Free will must be an illusion. You only do things because something in your brain told you to. If you understood all the chemistry and physics behind the operation of your brain, you would be able to see why you do things. — RepThatMerch22
There is an advantage to this approach. Mathematicians are not constrained by a definition of number, which allows them to discover new types of numbers all the time. — fishfry
There is no general definition of number anywhere in mathematics. Of course there are perfectly clear definitions of particular types of numbers. Integers, reals, quaternions, p-adics, transfinite ordinals, and so on. But nowhere in mathematical literature will you find anyone who ever says: "A number is defined as such and so." — fishfry
Post that reference and my thesis stands refuted. — fishfry
To me it's quite clear in the context of everything else Trump has said and done that he's a xenophobe/racist/bigot. — Benkei
Finite might be an important qualification don't you think? — apokrisis
Of course I realise that you take as unarguable that the MWI interpretation (your so-called non-interpretation interpretation :) ) is proven and quantum computation tapping unlimited resources is as good as a done thing. But I wonder what Popper would have said about such unqualified conviction? — apokrisis
It's a philosophical curiosity that there is no definition of number in mathematics. In other words if you major in math, get a Ph.D. spend a career as a professional mathematician, you will never encounter a book or a paper that says, "A number is such and so." — fishfry
* What is quantity?
* The imaginary unit i with i^2 = -1 ... what quantity does it represent?
* Do you regard i as a number?
* Does i exist? — fishfry
Problems with this: Pretty much the countries that are not-so-nice have histories of gross exploitation first by the nicer countries, and then by the thugs they left in power. But what really matters is that Trump is equating the people with the not-so-niceness of their countries, and he's doing it by race. That's racist racism 101. — tim wood
Then what did you mean by this?
"We've known that all Turing machines are equivalent since 1930s" — charleton
What sort of mind-bendingly ridiculous statement is this?
Computers shall never fully emulate any physical system. It is logically impossible.
But since you think its already been done; please give us an example of such a machine from the 1930s??
LOL — charleton
One obvious rejoinder to your analogy is that it's a poor one: 'computer and computational' don't easily map on to 'brain and mental' without remainder. — mcdoodle
It's a mid-20th century scientistic fantasy. I do think it's an interesting way of putting it, in that it spells out some of the ground that a lot of people evade: just what sort of factors would need to be aligned to make an ultra-physicalist view work. — mcdoodle
One problem anyway is 'state' versus ' process'. A still picture, if that is the equivalent of 'state', can be very deceptive about what 'process' is going on in the course of movement, taken in isolation. — mcdoodle
It's interesting then how hard it is to imagine 'I believe' being represented by 'I am in state 44: 34: 22: 67 :98'. I suggest that one issue is that 'belief' has an emotional, or at the very least a commitment component to it that natural language gives us. — mcdoodle
Suppose that we had a complete knowledge of neurophysi-ology and that we could order all possible human brain states (if not metrically, then at least topologically) in a phase space of n dimensions. Every point in this phase space would then represent a fully specific type of brain state. And, taking isomorphism for granted, a subset of these points would also represent the total set of possible mental states. — Feigl
See the source in (1.a). — ProgrammingGodJordan
The Big Bang thing is just Genesis and GTR makes no such prediction. It only concerns itself with measurements by clocks. As it turns out clocks are affected by gravity as are photons. I'm not surprised. So are waves in the ocean.
I love it when Determinists have to defend their faith. You figure all you have to do is throw out you God (Super-Duper-Determinatism) and people are going to fall over trying to be converted? Truly bathing in their own self-admitted illusions. You are living a life of illusions right? — Rich
It says no such thing. It's a simple equation. The rest of the story is just made up. In fact, there isn't even time in the equation. It is all about time as expressed in clocks and how acceleration affects then. There is nothing there about human experience of duration. Humans are not clocks. — Rich
Google it. — Rich