A circular object being the same as a square one would mean that it is circular and not-circular object at the same time. — elucid
Exactly. Societies have different established social rules on what women should do, not what makes one a woman. Those rules are sexist because they put women in boxes that limit them. Why can't a woman wear pants and have short hair and join the military and still be a woman? — Harry Hindu
It is the SRY gene by that definition, as per the name "Sex-determining region Y protein". Natural selection is not really relevant.What makes a person a man or woman? Natural selection. — Harry Hindu
I am basically saying something circular is never the same as something non-circular. — elucid
Wait, are you saying that they have figured, for example,our probability of choosing X in situtation A or that they have figured out that, given certain conditions, we will choose X? The latter does not require letting the events play out (and the main problem becomes incompabilitism's critisms) as you can know what will happen if you know all the variables (and determinism is true). Or do we somehow always choose to do what the events point out to? But the former does not mean that we are "scientifically determined" to do a thing, so it does not seem to be what you're saying.2. they played out and calculated (ran scenarios) what we would all do down to the last detail, i would argue that this was when we had free will. We are completely predictable at this point but we also had free will.
3. The gods let the events play out in real time and at this point what happens is all predestined or scientifically determined.
4. Any slight modification at any given point are also calculated. — christian2017
"A circle is never the same as a square." simply means that, at time T, the thing can not be both a circle and a square. But it could be a circle at time T and a square at time T'-this is the whole idea of change.For sake of clarity, I would like to say what I have been trying to say in a different way.
A circle is never the same as a square. Thus, a circle is never a square. Otherwise, it is either sometimes or always the same as a square. Thus, sometimes or always a square. This principle applies to all things. — elucid
It would have been different in another culture. — Harry Hindu
Or change how they talk, act and sound to that of a the other gender's-the subtle differences that makes someone of a gender along with the more usual ones.Just ask anyone around these parts and they will tell you that gender is a social construction. That means, that in order to change one's gender, they'd have to change their culture that they were raised in, not their clothes. In the same vein, religious people would have to change the culture that they were raised in order to have a different religion. — Harry Hindu
It is both. You have to both act and look the way of the other gender (and no, acting masculine/feminine is not what i'm talking about, but rather what makes someone recognize,in a social setting, someone else as a male or a female) and feel that way. Albeit the individual feeling comes first since it determines which way one should act.So, is "gender" a social construction, or a individual feeling? If is it an individual feeling, then how does a man know what it feels like to be a woman to claim that they are a woman? These are very basic questions that everyone should be asking, but they don't because they have an emotional attachment to their political beliefs, no different than a religious person. — Harry Hindu
Well, i apologize. Using "social construct" when i was just talking about how we use it in a social setting (which, to clarify, is what i'm asserting is more accurate) was clearly wrong on my behalf-albeit i do not get how i'm promoting sexism since i was not talking about people acting stereotypically like the other gender. (In your example, that is still a man since he, even if we grant that he can make a woman's voice and can look like a woman, does not "act that way" and does not feel that way.)You don't seem to understand what a social construction is. It is a shared assumption about others identities, which means that it comes from society, not the individual. Also, these assumptions can be wrong AND SEXIST. The assumption that a person wearing a dress is automatically a woman is wrong AND SEXIST. A man can wear dresses and still be a man. You're conflating the shared assumption of an individual with the actual physical characteristics of that individual and promoting SEXISM. — Harry Hindu
And I already pointed out that people's own identities about themselves can be wrong. Some people are delusional. Some people think that they are a special creation of some god. Telling them that they aren't is no different than telling a man who thinks he's a woman that he isn't. — Harry Hindu
That's mainly because you (and everyone else who identifiesthe same) equate being a man with having certain genitals and being a woman with having another set of genitals. Of course, from that perspective, that person will be a "man"-but a man that dresses like a woman, sounds like a woman, literally has boobs and the curves of a woman, has a generally feminine body and prefers to be on the girl side of things nonetheless.He has to come to that realization himself, but he can't make me use words that don't represent my identity. I am a man - a human male. His declaration of being a woman makes my (and everyone else who identifies the same), use of the word, "man" and "woman" incoherent. — Harry Hindu
That is not formal logic and the none of the consclusions follow. And, to top it all of, (2) is just circular. You might as well just say:(1) If God exists, God provided moral values and duties to humans
(2) Humans wrote canonical texts based on God's instructions
(3) Canonical texts demonstrate the moral values and duties provided by God (1,2 HS)
(4) People shared the canonical texts to spread the moral values and duties provided by God
(5) These canonical texts, moral values, and duties exist now (3,4 HS)
(6) God exists now (1,5 HS) — Beoroqo
The premise 1 equals if objective moral values and duties exist, then God exists. If so, objective moral values and duties are necessary for God’s existence. — KrystalZ
2. If you accept a sufficiently mature conspiracy theory, then you’ll come to doubt various people and institutions that have been set up to generate reliable data and evidence, then you’ll also have good reason to doubt the various people and institutions that generated the data and evidence for the conspiracy theory. — ModernPAS
3. If you must believe that you have good reason to doubt the basic claims of other religions—for example, that they lack direct, public evidence for their supernatural claims—then you must believe that you have good reason to doubt the supernatural claims of your own religion. — ModernPAS
11. If a belief is contradictory, then it is unfalsifiable. — ModernPAS
14. If a belief is unfalsifiable, then it is a kind of conspiracy theory. — ModernPAS
I would only accept this statement if it was rephrased as "When resources are focused towards the education of people in general, the outcomes are far greater in many areas of society." because, so far, you have not provided justification for why we should "focus our resources on young women's education".Because when resources are focused toward the education of young women the outcomes are far greater in many areas of society (as mentioned). — I like sushi
— Zelebg
Without random element chance is not involved at all. — Zelebg
"Brain waves" are representation of the full state of mind, I also call it "identity", which includes memory, personality, current mood, preferences, the way how a person thinks, feels, and of course also defines the way how to makes choices. Brain waves, i.e. identity/personality or 'state of mind' is the determiner — Zelebg
What "false definitions" am i using when i didn't even give a definition? I am literally just asking a question that i got from a book written by 4 very prominent philosophers on the subject (Robert Kane, Derk Pereboom etc.).Answer 1.) Does not compute due to false definition and other semantic issues. — Zelebg
Okay. And, since free will exists, determinism, the negation of indeterminism, is true. And, since determinism and free will are both true, then we also got answer to our first question-you're a compabilist. (or you do not get what indeterminism is, in which case, i suggest you first learn about it before talking about it since that's a pretty major aspect of free will)Answer 2.) No. Deliberation is determination. Indeterminism is only randomness. — Zelebg
Please take a look at the opening post and notice how different patterns or "receptors" represent different affinities or probabilities for that option to be choosen. — Zelebg
I defined the concept in certain terms and posed the question framed in thosee terms. I can not respond to your objection without first discussing the semantics of the terms you use. It would be much easier if you could just answer the question directly:
If this is not free will, then what exactly is it I am not free from? — Zelebg