Reductive materialism doesn't make any assumptions about what the nature of the physical is. What it argues is that mental phenomena can be reduced to physical phenomena – which seems to be exactly what is meant by "we are exhaustively physical beings". — Michael
If free will requires a rejection of causation then it requires that one's actions are uncaused, i.e. spontaneous. Does it really make sense to say that we have free will if our actions occur spontaneously? — Michael
Even if we are exhaustively physical beings it doesn't follow that our wills are brain states, but merely that they are physical in some sense we may have no understanding of. — John
If our will is spontaneous how would that contradict it being free?
I'd say more that unless someone has very unusual mental phenomena, a rejection of free will is far more likely to be based on faith, since there's no good evidence that all phenomena in the world are strongly causally deterministic. — Terrapin Station
No idea what could constitute "good evidence", but one assumes that Reality obeys the laws of physics, which are deterministic. — tom
Strong causal determinism hasn't been the received view in the sciences for something like 140 years now.one assumes that Reality obeys the laws of physics, which are deterministic. — tom
And that nonsense certainly isn't the received view in the sciences.l It's worse than that. Reality is a static space-time block. — tom
Strong causal determinism hasn't been the received view in the sciences for something like 140 years now. — Terrapin Station
Wait. Stop right there. There are a number of issues to bring up here, but given the way these sorts of discussions usually go, I'm just going to do one at a time.General relativity is isomorphic with the statement that Reality is a stationary block spacetime. The Wheeler-DeWitt synthesis of gravity and quantum mechanics is a stationary wavefunction. In the absence of the free will axiom quantum mechanics is superdeterministic.
So, according to the prevailing conception of science, Reality is fully determined. — tom
You're claiming that the "prevailing conception of science" is the block universe theory of time simply because the block universe theory of time is isomorphic with general relativity? — Terrapin Station
So you'd say that the block universe theory of time is indeed the received view in the sciences?Relativity mandates we take a 4D view of reality, and there is no way of escaping the block. — tom
So you'd say that the block universe theory of time is indeed the received view in the sciences? — Terrapin Station
Matter of Faith — anonymous66
Which statement(s) in that article to you take to imply that the block theory is the received view?Knock yourself out: https://www.quantamagazine.org/20160719-time-and-cosmology/ — tom
Which statement(s) in that article to you take to imply that the block theory is the received view? — Terrapin Station
That would make no sense. For example, the first sentence is this, "Einstein once described his friend Michele Besso as 'the best sounding board in Europe' for scientific ideas." That in no way amounts to a claim that block theory is the received view.All of it. — tom
It's supposed to be a conversation. ;-) I guess one could find those tedious, though.This is getting tedious by the way.
That would make no sense. For example, the first sentence is this, "Einstein once described his friend Michele Besso as 'the best sounding board in Europe' for scientific ideas." That in no way amounts to a claim that block theory is the received view. — Terrapin Station
Why is that illusion so stubbornly persistent?For us believing physicists, the distinction between past, present and future is only a stubbornly persistent illusion.” — tom
Not quite what I wrote, but anyway. I'd be surprised if anyone found anything non-standard, let alone contentious, in anything I wrote. Relativity mandates we take a 4D view of reality, and there is no way of escaping the block. We are space-time worms. We don't have free will. — tom
Newton's gravity is incompatible with special relativity: it allows action at a distance and is not Lorentz invariant. — tom
Whatever you might want to construct out of "gravity", it can't be a 4D spacetime block with a Lorentzian signature, and no such construction is forced upon you. Under relativity it is unavoidable.
You are simply refusing to accept an inescapable consequence of our best theories. Nothing in reality has ever been discovered to contradict GR, or the standard model, both of which are time-symmetric theories.
This is why most scientists don't believe in free will, because it doesn't fit with what they know.
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