Do you convince them to not have kids knowing what's in store for the human race?
— Marchesk
Keeping in mind, of course, that effective, reasonably priced, and widely available contraception - a prerequisite for anti-natalism - wasn't available until about 60 years ago. — T Clark
Descental spirit. Not ancestral. Otherwise, correct.So here you are with the first humans, who naturally think of you as the great ancestral spirit come to give them advice. — Marchesk
It is too late to be antinatalist. If one were going to nip child-bearing in the bud, one would have to have been actively promoting antinatalism to the immediate descendants of Homo Erectus. The day we became Homo sapiens -- hundreds of thousands of years ago -- was the day you should have been out and about preaching antinatalism. Now with 7.2 billion people, it is just too late. It is impossible to convince 7.2 billion people of ANYTHING. — Bitter Crank
Philos means love sophia wisdom. — Fooloso4
That is, free will isn't posited to save God from responsibility for all bad acts, but it allows for human responsibility for some acts. Without it, you would absolve all humans of all responsibility. — Hanover
The Christians invented free will? — Hanover
I have no problem thinking of New Atheists as being atheist fundamentalists. — anonymous66
Does what you read, and your interest in philosophy in general carry over to your "everyday life"? — anonymous66
To the extent that God has given humans free will, as many religions hold, not every person is doing God's work. — Hanover
, I specialised in Ethics and I work in ethics! — Mark Dennis
Statements of reason, pure or not, will have to be expressed in language. — alcontali
You don't believe that there are other views, or wrong views? — Terrapin Station
Your argument is that if there's some F (some type of thing) with property φ, then all G, H, I etc.(all types of things) must have property φ? — Terrapin Station
Anyway, your view strikes me as having faith in (strong) determinism, but I'm not sure why you'd have such faith in it — Terrapin Station
Your argument is that if there's some F (some type of thing) with property φ, then all G, H, I etc.(all types of things) must have property φ? — Terrapin Station
The idea is simply that there are different views, — Terrapin Station
I don't use the qualifiers as an endorsement. — Terrapin Station
It's nearly three o'clock in the night at my location. I'm turning in. Good night.
— god must be atheist
Yikes! It's only an hour earlier here. I guess we both got carried away. Fun conversation. — Relativist
You raised an objection which you can't defend.
— god must be atheist
The defense of the objection is that there is no support of strong determinism as a logical principle. The relevance of talking about it as a logical principle is that that's what Devans99 is appealing to in his proof.
16 minutes ago — Terrapin Station
The defense of the objection is that there is no support of strong determinism as a logical principle. The relevance of talking about it as a logical principle is that that's what Devans99 is appealing to in his proof. — Terrapin Station
I would like you to understand that free will is actually consistent with determinism - you too hastily dismissed that. It's as free as it needs to be to hold people accountable (regardless of whether we're talking morality or the law). — Relativist
So please show me this exception. I have nothing but asked of you for this, and now you lecture me on how one such instance invalidates determinism.
Be my guest. Invalidate determinism. I am all ears. Show me that example.
— god must be atheist
You're not understanding me. What I was objecting to was something stated as a logical principle.
I'm avoiding a discussion of whether we experience causality and what does or doesn't count as an example because that's a different topic. — Terrapin Station
How can we nail them to their misdeeds if they don't have a free will? — god must be atheist
If you only consider the fact that everything that occurs is inevitable, you have no basis for holding anyone accountable for their actions. I say they are accountable because they COULD have done something different. They WOULD have done different had they better understood the consequences, By holding people accountable in this way, it encourages more moral behavior. I want everyone to behave more morally, and this will only occur if morally is encouraged. If my program is successful, it doesn't matter much that it was inevitable - my role in it was still important. — Relativist
It was predictable, but that doesn't change the fact that the choice was a product of my internal processing - and I ate what I wanted. If you eat what you want, why would you not consider that your own free choice? — Relativist
The Grand Canyon's shape and our choices have this in common: they are inevitable. What is unique about ourselves is that we are complex decision-making machines, while the Colorado River is not. The output of a computer program is inevitable, but the computer is still needed to perform the computing that produces that output. Our choices are inevitable, but the workings of our brains are still necessary to reach that inevitable outcome. — Relativist
If I do what I want, why wouldn't I consider that a freely willed choice? — Relativist
Because the big bang did not decide that I would eat corn flakes for breakfast. I made the choice, based on my own desires at the time. If I do what I want, why wouldn't I consider that a freely willed choice? — Relativist
The choice has been determined, and it was predictable - but only in principle. In principle, the shape of the grand canyon was predictable at the big bang, the shaping process still required a long series of prior steps to get there. — Relativist
The shape of the grand canyon was not chosen, rather - it was a consequence of the conditions being what they were. Same with our choices - the choices (as choices) were not determined at the big bang; rather, the factors that led to those choices were inevitable. — Relativist