Do "you" control your choices, no, the randomness of your choices results in the feeling of control. — khaled
I didn't say that. Just to confirm, if the bunch of neurons called "you" decides something, even though each neuron has its own life and is just interacting with the others. Did the "you" control the neurons? — khaled
A subset of brain functions correct? This subset of brain functions is ultimately just a collection of neurons and other brain matter correct? How can you say that the emergent property "you" CONTROLS the lower level mechanisms? — khaled
So I reckon that rhetorical questions are an invalid language construct, because it's effectiveness relies upon the breaking of a fundamental code of language: that questions are a request for a response. — Serving Zion
"You feel like you control this but it's actually just like every other physical interaction" seems more accurate to me. — khaled
Uhhhhh. Aren't you literally proposing the mystical third way of causation that we both said doesn't exist, this "free". Something is either ontologically determined or it is random. There is no room for "free" unless free means "not determined" in which case it means random. You said this yourself... — khaled
that hate speech cannot be a cause of violent action — Isaac
Except it IS something random no? — khaled
But. You have different probabilities to do things before this biasing takes place no? — khaled
Uhhhh. What? You mean it's not something deterministic? — khaled
So I assume rigging a gun to shoot randomly by some indeterminate mechanism (say, random nuclear decay) and putting that in a public street is fine? — khaled
I said beyond wishful thinking. — Isaac
A is hate speech, BC and D are the additional thing your brain has to do to that speech to cause you to act violently. — Isaac
As in X is the sound waves, C is the final result of the indeterminate mental processes in your brain. — khaled
you are going to get that sentence and that sentence will affect you, — Coben
Now. Say X is hate speech, Y is violence and C is free will — khaled
I don't you remember you doing so. So would B C and E all be punishable or what? — khaled
Now. Does this mean the ONLY way for something to be punishable for you is if it has a single cause — khaled
So if one were to empirically establish that hate speech increases the likely hood of violence wouldn't that be good grounds for banning it? — khaled
so one wouldn't need to prove that shooting people causes them to die in order to make it punishable? — khaled
Shooting someone causes them to die is an empirical claim but we can't prove that — khaled
That someone saying 'the ape is on the loose' has no affect on you unless you choose to construct a meaning. — Coben
Rereading some of this I came across this quote right here. I thought you kept saying that the mind is physical no? — khaled
Also your definition of free will is basically equivalent to saying that mental processes don’t have predetermined results. — khaled
So, if one could prove that hate speech makes violence more likely — khaled
Where each factor contributed to “biasing the probability” (as you said in the free will thread). — khaled