Everything is compatible with Super-Duper-Determinism. God is all powerful. — Rich
Let's give some credit to those of religious faith. At least they are aware enough of their faith that they don't deny it. Determinists are swimming in their own admitted illusions. — Rich
What the heck does GTR have to do with Super-Duper-Determinism?? — Rich
It is not even compatible with QM... — Rich
The only Law of Physics that I know of is Quanum Mechanics and it would take a great myth maker to interpret QM into superdetermiminism. In fact, it would take an act of your faith. — Rich
What exactly does it mean for something not to be a function of the past? — JustSomeGuy
I have to second this, tom, you're displaying a very juvenile attitude with the tone of some of your comments. Being a smartass is extremely detrimental to intelligent conversation. — JustSomeGuy
As I said in one of my other posts, conflating causal issues related to QM with causal issues that are metaphysical and have been around for thousands of years shows a misunderstanding of both science and metaphysics. — T Clark
As with any religion Determinists believe that the Laws of Nature are unlimited in their power to do things in ways mortals cannot comprehend. — Rich
It's as much of a conspiracy as any religion. People of like faith get together to worship the Supreme and there is always someone to pass the plate. If one really wants to understand the nature of religion, study Determinism and its evangelists. — Rich
As I said in one of my other posts, conflating causal issues related to QM with causal issues that are metaphysical and have been around for thousands of years shows a misunderstanding of both science and metaphysics. — T Clark
As I said in one of my other posts, conflating causal issues related to QM with causal issues that are metaphysical and have been around for thousands of years shows a misunderstanding of both science and metaphysics. — T Clark
Certain theories in Quantum Mechanics claim that there is randomness, but randomness isn't the same "freedom". Or are you referring to something other than randomness that I'm not aware of? — JustSomeGuy
If its actions are truly random, then the mind would not be "setting its own initial conditions". To set its own initial conditions in any coherent way, there would have to be some consideration of inputs and expected outputs. — CasKev
Even a random number generator requires a seed before it can generate a meaningless random number. — CasKev
I don't understand your comment. Do you mind to rephrase? — bahman
1.a) Evolution is optimising ways of contributing to the increase of entropy, as systems very slowly approach equilibrium. (The universe’s predicted end) — ProgrammingGodJordan
Yes, I agree. But you then have the tension between body and consciousness which this leads to improbable situation. This was subject of another thread. Please see the link in OP for further discussion. — bahman
I cannot resolve the problem which stated in this thread and the other thread if I accept that the mind is byproduct of brain activity. — bahman
What information would be considered when choosing the initial conditions? It would have to rely on expected results based on existing information, once again leading to determinism... — CasKev
The importance of this question comes to my mind after the discussion in this comment. — bahman
Maybe when taken out of context. You still attach some magical quality to Mind that is the final factor in decision-making, independent of the experiences and expected results. — CasKev
Causation/determination exists, regardless of how many factors are interwoven. — CasKev
That's not accurate. If everything is the result of a cause, there cannot be true freedom of choice. A choice in itself does not imply free will. We need to look at the choice and ask: if literally every single thing leading up to that choice were exactly the same, everything in the history of the universe had happened exactly the same, could you possibly have made a different choice than the one you made? If everything that happened is the result of causation, the answer would be no. — JustSomeGuy
So I've heard. I just watched a Youtube video last night in which the speaker made that exact same point, that black holes have infinite density. — fishfry
You're still subjecting God to time, which doesn't make sense. God sees all of your decisions at once, your entire life as a point, a singularity. This is what the universe looks like outside of time. — JustSomeGuy
You are subjecting God to the constructs of time, which is a mistake. The reality is that everything that ever has existed or happened, and everything that ever will exist or happen, can just be seen as being. A sort of singularity of things going on. We cannot help but view things through the lens of time because that's how our brains process information, but time is not something "out in the world", it only exists inside our minds. — JustSomeGuy
Think of the universe as a hunk of clay, with it's own bumps and shapes and characteristics, all just existing at once as it is. God can look at the clay as a whole and see all of it, because he is not part of the clay. — JustSomeGuy
No, His knowledge of our decision is not similar to our reflection of past events. He can tell us what we will do in future. — bahman
So lets focus on the immaterial aspect of the mind, we have perceptions, we have continuous narrations and self talk, we have a large array of images and sounds but if the mind were absent of all these qualities could we still say there is a mind that is present? — Fumani
The only justification I have come across for induction is Reichenbach's, which is essentially: 'we have no better alternatives, so we might as well use induction'. Which is fine, but unnecessary, since we will use induction anyway, as we could not do otherwise, being the sort of creatures we are. — andrewk
You mean deductive logical support. Inferential and probabilistic reasons can be given for it. It's seems perfectly rational to me to infer that we have this habit of mind because causality exists, which permits an evolutionary account. — Marchesk
Time is fundamental variable of any dynamical theory. This means that time cannot be an emergent property of any dynamical theory otherwise we are dealing with a contradiction. Therefore time cannot be created/emergent. — bahman
It is easy to see how an expanded physics or psychophysics can in theory correlate vibrations or patterns of energy with particular qualia such as colors and sounds and thereby for the brain to generate a virtual reality show.
The really hard problem is how the brain creates a private subjective world and for what reason if it is not efficacious. It is not only a hard problem it is probably an impossible problem if consciousness is not a product of the brain. — lorenzo sleakes
"At some time in the long distant undatable past, an eye opened up onto the world and something different began to happen in this sector of reality possessing the principle of life. A rock is clearly not aware of its solidity but a life form with a complexity capable of generating eyes is aware of itself, is conscious of itself."
(All quotes in this post are from O Shaughnessy in his work “Consciousness and the World”) — michael r d james
He can say what he likes, but it's still wrong to deny evolution on the grounds that determinism is the case. — Michael
It's evolution if the heritable characteristics of biological populations have changed over successive generations. It doesn't need to be randomly caused. — Michael
Are you actually trying to deny evolution because determinism is the case? That's a very strange argument to make. — Michael
That just means that randomness is not globally allowed. You still can have local randomness. — bahman
Maybe his theory is incompatible with determinism, but it doesn't then follow that evolution is. Evolution is a fact, and according to you so is determinism. Therefore they must be compatible. — Michael
If we assume that each particular variation was from the beginning of all time preordained... natural selection or survival of the fittest, must appear to us as superfluous laws of nature.
It is easy to see how the brain creates a virtual reality generating the qualia that we experience in consciousness. — lorenzo sleakes
Oh yeah!! Where it that? "Ontological Ultimate" is not an expression uttered by Darwin. SO who are you kidding? — charleton
On the other hand an omnipotent and omniscient Creator, ordains everything and foresees everything. Thus we are brought face to face with a difficulty as insoluble as that of free will and predestination.
There is only one deep theory about nature and that is QM which is totally probabilistic. Other than this, you have the Laws of Nature which is not a theory but a Pagan God. — Rich
The biggest problem with determinism it's that there is absolutely zero evidence for it. Other than that, it is a nice story of how the Laws of Nature (God) determines everything. — Rich
The biggest contribution that QM has had on philosophy is that it finally put to rest the possibility that there could actually be a deterministic universe. — Rich
Incorrect. Quantum mechanics doesn't say that we can change what we will. — Michael Ossipoff
But yes, I admit that, at philosophy forums, quantum mechanics has a big pseudoscientific mystique. — Michael Ossipoff
And I also admit that there are some people here who are all confused about the difference between, and the boundaries between philosophy and science (quantum mechanics is particularly popular in that regard). — Michael Ossipoff
I'm not saying that QM doesn't have any philosophical relevance. A recognized authority, a physicist specializing in QM, wrote that QM lays to rest the notion of an objectively-existent physical world. — Michael Ossipoff
Have you ever tried to reduce your craving for some nutritionally-undesirable kind of food? — Michael Ossipoff
The Laws of Nature act in mysterious ways and it is not for us to understand them - not that understanding had any meaning anyway. — Rich
Determinism acts in both ways and all ways, because it is more of a religion than a philosophy. All one has to do is assign whatever attributes one wishes to the mystical, omnipresent, omnipotent Laws of Nature and bingo, you have your story. One can appeal to the power of God in the same way. — Rich
I really think you are clueless here. — charleton
Determinism just means that for each effect there are causes. — charleton
True there is no such thing as chance in an absolute sense. — charleton
Chance in a deterministic world just means we've not enough information to predict all outcomes in a complicated world. — charleton
A dice is not random; its landing is determined by the throw, and other causal factors, that are not easy to measure. — charleton
How does this correlate? — charleton