every given set of causes results in one and only one possible set of effects...If a given set of causes can result in several possible effects, then the effects are not fully determined and thus we are in an indeterminist outlook. — Olivier5
Is it conceivable that there is a world where events have connections, but the connections are not mechanical? That is, for a given state at T0, more than one future state of the system is possible? — Echarmion
A bayesian might well argue that far from the world appearing to be deterministic, it actually appears probabilistic. — Echarmion
We regularly produce speech errors (I haven't found a solid source on the frequency) — Srap Tasmaner
Why isn't our speech production better at its job? — Srap Tasmaner
Is this sort of passive aggressiveness par for the course around here? — Olivier5
That would in my view make it easier to think through the issue of moral responsibility. One can ask questions such as "should she have reacted differently, or taken the issue more seriously?" And these questions now have a clear meaning, because we assume that she could indeed have acted differently, — Olivier5
The basis for such an action seem more like mercy to me... i.e. the poor fellow couldn't help but turn out that way given his upbringing and has it already bad enough as it is without the extra punishment. — ChatteringMonkey
Considering upbringing as something outside of one's preferred choices seems like a strange notion given that, I would assume, one's upbringing is always to some extend part of what determines one's will or preferred choices. — ChatteringMonkey
I was thinking of folk theories, as in folk physics or folk theory of mind - intuitive or conditioned but unschooled understanding of how some aspect of the world works. — SophistiCat
This is where things get complicated. What we hold an individual to be accountable for vs. what we consider to be an external cause can vary quite a bit. — SophistiCat
The comparison of sounds, and their similarities and differences, happens within consciousness. — Harry Hindu
I haven't caught up on this convo. Is this the usual "<magic thing> is possible because quantum mechanics"? — Kenosha Kid
Ah. Yes, having basically the same conversation with the same person on another thread. I didn't really get anywhere with it, but good luck. — Kenosha Kid
And yet neither thermodynamics, nor chemistry nor biology are deterministic. They all use probabilities to make predictions. Something does not compute here. — Olivier5
As a matter of fact, none of these "jumps" from one level of organization to the next has been actually understood, let alone 'reduced' by science. — Olivier5
Whatever his opinion on the matter, no neuroscientist will ever be able to predict what he will think tomorrow. — Olivier5
Quantum biochemistry is a thing but unfortunately not one I know a lot about. — Kenosha Kid
I am not aware on any scientific theory saying that the fundamental indeterminism of quantum mechanics resolves somehow into determinism at the biological scale. — Olivier5
Sometimes you may want to conclude that what we've been talking about all this time is not what we thought it was, or that it's just not a well-formed concept, and we may be better off leaving it alone than trying to precisify it with philosophy. — SophistiCat
the concept of free will is heterogeneous and inconsistent. — SophistiCat
More importantly, those aspects of free will that matter to us - responsibility being foremost - can be dealt with on their own, with no reference to free will. That is, if you want to consider whether we are morally responsible in such and such circumstances (e.g. when our actions are physically determined by an earlier state of the universe), why not just talk about that? Why confuse matters by bringing up something that no one is quite sure about? — SophistiCat
Your philosophy is quite classical, verging on the medieval sometimes. Mine is more current. — Olivier5
Although brains obey quantum mechanics, they do not seem to exploit any of its special features. Molecular machines, such as the light-amplifying components of photoreceptors, pre- and post-synaptic receptors and the voltage- and ligand-gated channel proteins that span cellular membranes and underpin neuronal excitability, are so large that they can be treated as classical objects. — Koch C., Hepp K. (2006). Quantum mechanics in the brain. Nature
QM is a little more than "a sketchy and speculative fringe theory", I think. — Olivier5
Your philosophy is quite classical, verging on the medieval sometimes. Mine is more current. — Olivier5
I don't think so. Complex systems -- eg living organisms -- are not fully deterministic. — Olivier5
Your brain is made of quanta. Everytime you see fluorescence, you see a quantic phenomenon. Evolution works through mutations which are mostly due to radioactivity, a quantic phenomenon. Hence mutations can't be predicted. Etc etc. — Olivier5
Just saying: the evidence so far points to indeterminism. — Olivier5
What's your evidence that the present state of affairs in the universe - our discussion here included -- was fully predetermined as early a split-second after the Big Bang? — Olivier5
Modern science tells us that not every single event can be predicted, and that kinda points to the indeterminist world view. In this context, determinism bears the burden of proof. — Olivier5
Yes. — Olivier5
I mean: by science — Olivier5
Indeterminism doesn't deny some causation and determination. It just says that "not everything is predetermined". — Olivier5
it would depend where the ball goes, what's its trajectory compared to other stuff out there. Like it could get stuck in a tree branch or something... :-) — Olivier5
Yes, you ought to, if you can send the ball faster than 11km per second. — Olivier5
You're welcome to — Olivier5
Indeterminism? — Olivier5
My bad, I thought it was a proper journal, but:
The refereed Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies, a major resource for college-level instruction, especially honors courses, builds on the classical paideia of educating the whole person. This educational endeavor aspires to restore Judeo-Christian ethical and intellectual foundations that all can cherish.
it's a religious propaganda thing. Obviously you're going to regurgitate creationist misrepresentations of evolution!!! :facepalm: — Kenosha Kid
Radin. I knew that he was a crackpot, but that was more from the way reasoned more than anything else. — SophistiCat
Another apriorist giving this dead horse yet another beating. — SophistiCat
any actualization of a potency by an agent is an instance of essential causality.
We can now see that free choices are not uncaused choices. They are the actualization of one of several possible courses of action by the moral agent. — Dfpolis
More precisely, I expect my theories about my neurological processes to give an accurate account of my experience. If a theory doesn’t fit with the facts, it must be rejected or improved upon. — Olivier5
We have only one process for delivering oxygen to the brain, — Isaac
There are fours arteries entering the brain, two carotides and two cervical, all connected inside the brain so they work with and even up one another. — Olivier5
Initiation? You mean explaining mechanism? — Olivier5
you also need a process of comparing preferences with one another. — Olivier5
And as any process, this comparison can fail to provide usable information... HENCE it stands to reason that it needs a backup. — Olivier5
I experience, personally, a capacity to choose options at random. — Olivier5
Within this view, it would be simplistic in the extreme to assume that we have one single procedure for making choices, one single logical process that works under every and all circumstances. — Olivier5
It is difficult, but possible. If... — debd
That would be a very different approach indeed (and one that I would endorse): start from the commonsense assumption that there is such a thing as moral responsibility, then work out what it is. — SophistiCat
You're afraid to commit? To what? The idea of randomness? — Olivier5
You know what I find hard to commit to?... — Olivier5
This is something that does demonstrably happen. — Olivier5
Otherwise how would they chose a plum, do you think? — Olivier5
mine is much much simpler: we just pick plums at random. — Olivier5
This is an argument, though perhaps not a very good one. — SophistiCat
He apparently believes that the only thing that can bear the "ultimate" responsibility is that which is itself uncaused (but not random/chancy). — SophistiCat
is that in life, one frequently encounters a certain type of situation, where one needs to make a choice in a limited amount of time (e.g. one doesn't want another donkey to eat one's barley), and yet the options appears equally valuable — Olivier5
People chose stuff at random all the time. Donkeys too. — Olivier5
You must not have spent much time with donkeys in your life. — Olivier5
Any donkey out there is able to chose between two equivalent options in a nanosecond — Olivier5
even the people who like green more than red press red once in a while. It’s not like all of them will chose to press their favorite color for the entire damn test. — Olivier5
