The main point is that your argument for aseity is fallacious, I think. — ToothyMaw
According to the aseity argument you outlined in you latest post, it is logically necessary that if we have free will, we exist with aseity, and, thus, are morally responsible. — ToothyMaw
I mean, we have no control over whether or not we have free will, and thus exist with aseity, and thus have moral responsibility. How could we control those things? — ToothyMaw
1. If we are morally responsible, we exist with aseity
2. We are morally responsible
3. Therefore, we exist with aseity — Bartricks
But you've reasoned like this:
2. We exist with aseity.
3. Therefore we are morally responsible — Bartricks
8. Therefore I have not come into existence. — Bartricks
I do know that whatever they mean, they do not capture my argument for my argument certainly committed no modal fallacy. — Bartricks
So you are saying that if we have free will we are morally responsible, right? — ToothyMaw
Furthermore, how does that argument mean that if we exist with aseity then we are morally responsible? — ToothyMaw
I did not say 'necessary' once. So you're introducing the notion of necessity, not me. It is not present in my argument. I do not believe in necessary truths. — Bartricks
3. Therefore, if I have come into existence, I am not morally responsible for my initial character.
4. I am not morally responsible for my environment or the laws of nature that prevail in it.
5. If I am not morally responsible for my initial character and not morally responsible for my environment. and the laws of nature that prevail in it, then I am not morally responsible for anything. — Bartricks
If said state of the universe is necessarily the result of previous states, and it would have to be for your character to be predetermined, then it seems to follow that determinism is true. — ToothyMaw
If said state of the universe is necessarily the result of previous states, and it would have to be for your character to be predetermined, then it seems to follow that determinism is true. — ToothyMaw
Determinism: the doctrine that all events, including human action, are ultimately determined by causes external to the will. — ToothyMaw
your assertion that if we come into existence then we are not responsible for our initial character implies you believe that all other events not related to human action are also determined — ToothyMaw
I assume you will dispute my definition of determinism — ToothyMaw
Determinism: The world is governed by (or is under the sway of) determinism if and only if, given a specified way things are at a time t, the way things go thereafter is fixed as a matter of natural law. — ToothyMaw
If my reasoning here is faulty just say so. — ToothyMaw
Essentially I'm saying this: you claim all of the factors that affect our character, and thus actions, are external to the will. One of those elements, our initial character, if it is to be out of our control, must be the result of factors outside of our character that can be identified with a state of the world. Furthermore, if this state of the world is fixed as a function of previous states of the world that originate with a specific state of the world at some time t, and it would have to be if it were determined, then determinism must be true. — ToothyMaw
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