Abdul
JustSomeGuy
T Clark
Is free will an illusion? Are our lives already mapped out? — Abdul
WISDOMfromPO-MO
WISDOMfromPO-MO
everything that happens in the universe is a result of some cause, — JustSomeGuy
Rich
If everything is determined, that includes illusions.
If everything is determined, that includes determinism.
Therefore, if determinism is assumed to be true, one's position on free will vs. determinism is determined.
Finally, if everything is determined, that would include physicalism/materialism. What determined physicalism/materialism? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
JustSomeGuy
I was going to suggest that we just shut down the forum since all of the discussions were already determined, but then I remembered it was beyond our control since the bouncing particles are making all of the illusory decisions. The proceeding statement is in itself an illusion since everyone knows bouncing particles don't know how to write or talk to each other. They have no interest. They just like bouncing around.
I guess the only remaining question that I have (everything is were clear) is why some bouncing particles (btw, there is no such thing as a particle) make some people think they have free will, while others create the opposite illusion. Is it because they have a sense of humor? — Rich
btw, there is no such thing as a particle — Rich
JustSomeGuy
WISDOMfromPO-MO
JustSomeGuy
At any rate, physical reality is seamless and law-governed, (possibly) unfolding over time, not a chain or network of discrete events that have somehow to be connected by causal cement — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Causes, far from being a constitutive stuff of the physical world, are things we postulate to re-connect that which has been teased apart — WISDOMfromPO-MO
WISDOMfromPO-MO
I don't see the relevance of this distinction. Isn't saying "physical reality is seamless" just a more concise way of stating what I said? That everything in the universe is inescapably and necessarily interconnected? — JustSomeGuy
Can you elaborate on what you mean by this? — JustSomeGuy
BC
Rich
This issue has been on my mind a lot since we talked last, and I'm trying to figure out how to make sense of things from a non-deterministic viewpoint. No breakthroughs yet, unfortunately. — JustSomeGuy
JustSomeGuy
Rich
Are you saying each individual event is isolated and unconnected, unrelated to all other events? — JustSomeGuy
CasKev
JustSomeGuy
You can have causality and choice, which is exactly what we experience in our lives. A Mind is making choices based upon memory. — Rich
Rich
That's not accurate. If everything is the result of a cause, there cannot be true freedom of choice — JustSomeGuy
CasKev
Having a Mind that is making choices is exactly what we experience in life. — Rich
I want to cross the street. I look left and then I look right and I decide to go right. — Rich
CasKev
Isn't this totally opposite of what I wrote? — Rich
Someone's bouncing particles are having a bad day. — Rich
tom
That's not accurate. If everything is the result of a cause, there cannot be true freedom of choice. A choice in itself does not imply free will. We need to look at the choice and ask: if literally every single thing leading up to that choice were exactly the same, everything in the history of the universe had happened exactly the same, could you possibly have made a different choice than the one you made? If everything that happened is the result of causation, the answer would be no. — JustSomeGuy
tom
Causation/determination exists, regardless of how many factors are interwoven. — CasKev
WISDOMfromPO-MO
Isn't saying "physical reality is seamless" just a more concise way of stating what I said? That everything in the universe is inescapably and necessarily interconnected? — JustSomeGuy
Are you saying each individual event is isolated and unconnected, unrelated to all other events? — JustSomeGuy
CasKev
I am saying that causes exist only in the imaginations of humans. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
tom
What information would be considered when choosing the initial conditions? It would have to rely on expected results based on existing information, once again leading to determinism... — CasKev
CasKev
If the mind operates in a similar fashion, there will be some kind of randomizer in the brain, whose output will require the attribution of meaning, which could also be random. — tom
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