Damir Ibrisimovic
Who needs a new theory to verify that all sorts of people are incapable of recognizing poor reasoning in the wild? — creativesoul
Blue Lux
gurugeorge
Blue Lux
Forgottenticket
I believe that you are referring to the joke. It's separated topic and you will find some of my answers there. So, please comment there... — Damir Ibrisimovic
I need a bit more to agree to disagree or agree on the existence of free will - without qualifiers... — Damir Ibrisimovic
The joke presupposes exactly what is at issue. One cannot give away something they've never had. Poor language use doesn't make a good argument. Talking in terms of giving away free will is talking about giving up on the idea or giving up the belief in free will. — creativesoul
The scenarios of the joke are simple enough to test it in a cafe with a friend. Since we can assume that enough people tested the scenarios from 22 May 2011 - we can start to talk about it as a theory — Damir Ibrisimovic
Who needs a new theory to verify that all sorts of people are incapable of recognizing poor reasoning in the wild?
The joke is a bit ironic... — creativesoul
The proposal is "Free Will exists" and it's not new. With enough tests, the proposal is promoted into theory. What is new are scenarios to test the new theory. :)
I'm not really interested to judge the capacity of other people to recognise pure reasoning... — Damir Ibrisimovic
yatagarasu
Damir Ibrisimovic
A theory to test whether or not free will exists cannot be built upon language use that already assumes precisely what needs argued for. — creativesoul
Damir Ibrisimovic
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.