I argue it matters, for 2 reasons.Fair point but I was trying to point out that if you comply, your free will is meaningless, it doesn't matter whether you have it or not. — TheMadFool
It may be a correct neuro scientific description of the brain activities, but the will, being free, must be above those deterministic factors. Picture the cartoon with the white and black angels on each shoulder of the person. The black angel typically represents inclinations. The white angel typically represents reason and conscience. The will is the person in the middle that chooses to side with one of the angels. It makes the final call.Why? It's the gist of a standard neuroscientific description. — litewave
To clarify, are you arguing from the standpoint that free will does not exist? in which case, I would agree with you that our acts are determined by the vector sum of all internal and external forces/reasons. But if we start with the premise that free will exists, then this description leaves no room for a will to be free. Could you clarify your standpoint? Then we can go from there.Whatever reason you would have for the resisting, that reason is the minion in your mind that acts against the minion of anger. — litewave
I can't always tell; but there is a difference between perception and reality. And that difference matters. E.g. the difference between freely accepting a marriage proposal, and marrying a robot that is programmed to say yes.Can you tell, from that alone, whether this person is doing so willingly (free) /unwillingly (not free)? No! Therein lies the rub. — TheMadFool
Indeed, I think that may work. The following assumptions would have to be true:[...] A low frequency of recidivism, on the other hand, would mean we can override our "programming." — TheMadFool
That sounds correct. The robot would have to be virtually the same as the human subject in every way - e.g. same memories, inclinations, situation, etc. - minus free will.we can compare humans with artificial entities — TheMadFool
I take back what I said. Free will is not another force that we add to sum up among the other inclinations. Rather, free will can always choose against all the inclinations, no matter their intensity. That's what makes it free.the existence of free will would add another "internal force" that can change our behavior. — Samuel Lacrampe
Of course, if everything is determined, then everything is determined. But we can still talk about things being true or false, and good or bad. E.g. Even if I am forced to state that "2+2=3", it is still a false statement. Likewise, even if I am forced to kill an innocent man, it is still a wrongful act (according to most ethics).You can tell me why you're a determinist all day long, but the real reason you are is because you lacked the power not to be. — Hanover
I think deterrent and rehabilitative are still applicable without free will. Most of us would agree that a dog does not have free will; yet we can use processes to deter and rehabilitate.In the absence of free will, retributive, deterrent, and rehabilitative arms of justice don't make sense — TheMadFool
Sure. I have attempted to answer this question here.Talking about normative ethics cannot be done until we have established whether it is possible or not to even do normative ethics — Hello Human
Of course, this would be circular. But that was not my point. My point here was that we cannot have a justification without first having a normative ethics.using normative ethics to establish whether normative ethics are possible is a fundamentally flawed way to approach the problem. — Hello Human
But to propose what reasons are sufficient would be doing normative ethics, a consequentialist would say that an action is justified because it causes more utility, a Kantian would something else, and all the others too. This discussion is focused on metaethics. — Hello Human
Hello.If you justify an action before committing it, doesn’t that imply free will? If you cannot justify it, you act in a different manner. — NOS4A2
Hello.Free will, which is nonsensically defined anyway (free from what?), plays no role in this. — SolarWind
In your view, what is the lowest form of being that is conscious? Is a rock conscious? If not, then the point remains: science says that rocks are older than any living being.[...] And perhaps to a lesser extent lower life forms - worms bacteria etc. — Benj96
This distinction is in the function but not in the act. It seems to me that both are IBE, which is used both to build the hypothesis and to test it against new data.Abduction is formulating a hypothesis, while induction is testing a hypothesis. — aletheist
Yes I'm familiar with how Peirce described it (I gave the link to this example in the OP). In which case, it seems to me that both abduction and induction are IBE, and the distinction is that induction is a general explanation whereas abduction is a specific one.[...] He helpfully characterized the three propositions as rule, case, and result. — aletheist
I accept that claim. Thanks.Deduction derives necessary conclusions based strictly on formal considerations. — aletheist
No, it is not necessarily false, it is contingently false--it is contradicted by experience, not logic. That is what makes it inductive, rather than deductive. — aletheist
If some swans are black, the explication that necessarily follows is that the hypothesis "all swans are white" is false. So we falsify the hypothesis with deduction as you've defined it.Deduction is the explication of what would follow necessarily from that hypothesis if it were true. — aletheist
Yes. As the original hypothesis is in contradiction with the new data, then it is necessarily false. So this is deduction.We go looking for more swans and see a black one, so our hypothesis is falsified. — aletheist
As the original hypothesis is not in contradiction with the new data, then it is not necessarily false. This is also deduction.If we were never to see a black swan, then the hypothesis would not be falsified, but that does not warrant certainty that it is true since we only ever observe a finite sample of swans. — aletheist
The key is the word "rational". If a person chooses the path of reason 100% of the time, then you are correct that any change in decision, even freely chosen, must come from a change in the situation. But the real impact of free will comes before that; when it comes to choosing between the path of reason and the path of the appetite (when the two are conflicting).Why would a rational person who made the rational decision in that scenario the first time not make it the second? — Kenosha Kid
I'm with you on that one. "Knowledge" is "justified true belief". I don't think someone truly knows what they are talking about if they cannot justify with simple explanations, even if these simple explanations are a summary of the real thing only.You asked me what I think: either I am not capable to understand those super-complex explanations, or those super-complicated explanations are simply long complicated senseless phrases that are intended to make ordinary people like me that ''scientists know the truth, but it's complicated'' when in fact there is only the impotence of the materialistic view of the reality. — Eugen