There is physical proof that the brain makes decisions before we carry out an action, therefore we do not have free will - is one form of evidence that is empirically undeniable. — GreyScorpio
It is still a form of evidence that we should not ignore. — GreyScorpio
It's not nearly as clear cut as you make it sound. — Ying
Say I did an experiment with 3 identicle mes in 3 identicle universes. I ask them all that question. They'd all answer exactly the same. It was predetermined. — Thehoneyman
If you don't know what free means in the context of free will, then how is it possible you have empirical evidence against it? — Jeremiah
then how is it possible you have empirical evidence against it? — Jeremiah
I don't think you have any right to tell me what I should believe. — GreyScorpio
just like we cannot understand the concept of God. — GreyScorpio
don't think you have any right to tell me what I should believe. — GreyScorpio
If hard determinism were true, and I am an external agent then by your standards my function would be to tell you what to believe and you would have to comply, — Jeremiah
Gods are fantasies created by human imagination; it is not that hard to understand. — Jeremiah
In fact I think this could be considered a counter example against the concept of hard determinism. If I push a rock it has no choice but to roll the direction I will it; however, if that rock could resist my push then that is something else. — Jeremiah
The universes being identical is key here because the indentical people will make the same choices because they are identical in every way down to every thought. — Thehoneyman
If hard determinism were true, the function of decision making doesn't then fall into the hands of a normal human being. — GreyScorpio
Your statement here shows how little thought you have put into this, we are very much shaped by the other humans around us. — Jeremiah
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.