some way going to be 'determined' by the past — Mike Adams
Please could you then offer an alternative explanation for how a current action can be driven by past influences without leading to an infinite regression — Mike Adams
And, just so you know, my current line of arguments are in no way 'faith' based, but rather grounded in science and logic — Mike Adams
I'm afraid we'all have to agree to disagree that what you have offered here is a suitably detailed explanation of how such a mental process could occur. — Mike Adams
Of course. Thank you for the nonsense response.Correct. There is nothing in common because the Whole is inseparable. Matter is decaying while life moves in the opposite direction of self-organization and creativity. Of course, everything remains as a fabric in the universe
The explanation Is that is the mind. It is irreducible and fundamental to life. No faith involved. It is everyone's experience of choosing and creating. — Rich
Calling something fundamental and irreducible is quite a leap of faith, — CasKev
More likely, the mind (our central processing unit) is just not well enough understood yet. As technology continues to advance, the complexities of the brain will be unwoven, probably to the point where we will be able to 'see' a decision being made. — CasKev
If you can find something that is lower than the mind that doesn't require a leap of faith then go for it. It is there in everyone's lives, it is learning, it is creating, and it is evolving and it is not only fundamental to existence, it is existence....
...Now we are entering into faith and religion. Using words like technology, CPU, etc. doesn't make it scientific, though it might make you feel like it does. As with all an anthropomorphic gods, all you have done is created one more - The Computer Brain, that determinists worship. It's a religious story. — Rich
There are mountains of evidence suggesting that if you damage the brain, you alter the mind. — VagabondSpectre
It's actually rather amusing and ironic how Determinism is merely a religious off-shoot of Calvinism. Determinists adopted the faith in fate without the God. In God's stead, naturally, there is Natural Laws. — Rich
Yes, there is a mountain of evidence that if you damage a TV circuit, it will alter the picture not the TV studio where shows are actually produced. — Rich
The religion of course lies in the unshakable faith that all of this is fated — Rich
Actually my, tentative acceptance of determinism is an off-shoot of science. — VagabondSpectre
You talk about brains, and neurons, and gravity, and circuitry sounds very scientific and creates a lot of gravitas, but at the end has nothing to do with determinism. — Rich
Causality (what the laws of physics seek to describe) has to do with determinism because it "determines" how matter and energy behaves. — VagabondSpectre
The only scientific equation that we have that speaks to causality is quantum theory. It is probabilistic. Nothing is repeatable. Some much, much less so than others. Every event is different and measurements are always approximate and that is only for those events that can actually be measured.
If you need enlightenment, go read Daniel Dennet. He is about as close to a prophet as you are going to find for the determinism religion. Now, I know what it means to talk to people of faith, so this is going to get us no where, so let's call it an end. Otherwise it gets silly. — Rich
If quantum experiments were not repeatable, we wouldn't have any reliable knowledge or data concerning them... — VagabondSpectre
They are repeatable only to the extent that there always had to be an aspect of the experiment that is unknown. Heisenberg Principal. Hence the information is good enough for all practical purposes but necessarily unknown as far as completeness is concerned. — Rich
Determinists are always mixing up precision with good enough FAPP. It is the difference between the two that makes Determinism obsolete and Determinism good enough for the faithful. — Rich
Really, you want to make Quantum deterministic? Well the only way is to explore the Infinite Worlds of Everett's Mega-World Many Worlds. First you have to devise a experiment that crosses into the Infinite Worlds. I would say Occam's Razor would implore the Calvinist version of fate and Heaven. Far easier with the same results. — Rich
precisely the likelihood — VagabondSpectre
Collapsing wave functions and determinism are not mutually exclusive... — VagabondSpectre
the way almost everything is — VagabondSpectre
inescapable consistency in the causal forces remains despite discovering quantum indeterminacy. — VagabondSpectre
We both still live with the illusion of free will, — VagabondSpectre
No but probabilistic wave functions and determined are. I can't believe the twisting and turning that you are willing to go through to get to your goal. Just forget the justification. You want your life to be fated? You believe in it deeply? Then just go for it. Nothing wrong with faith unless you make it wrong. — Rich
Zero precision. All measurements necessarily are approximate and incomplete. You really are in a hurry to get to your goal. — Rich
The more electrons we check in the experiment I described, the closer and closer the results correspond to our predictions based on past experience. — VagabondSpectre
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