Look back at what you wrote... confusing the concepts of conditional and contingent. — Mongrel
That was a bit of a shorthand but I thought the context made it clear what I meant. If A depends conditionally on B, and B is contingent, — Pierre-Normand
If B (a set of spaciotemporal specifications), then A (where A is a statement of natural law.) — Mongrel
That is correct.Laws can't be derived logically from mere sets of empirical observations. — Pierre-Normand
To be precise, statements of natural law concerning ravens ideally express the nature of ravens. Expressions of that kind assert what one should expect regarding ravens, so there's a normative aspect to it. At the very least this is rooted in the normativity inherent in language use. Whatever more one says about it will reveal something about how one approaches the problem of induction. It's possible that some ontological commitment will fall out of that.. or not. It depends on the theory of truth in play.The law would derive from some features of the nature of ravens — Pierre-Normande
Sure. It may be that the universe is necessarily the way it is. No apriori nor aposteriori knowledge contradicts this. So it may be that all true statements about the universe are necessarily true. Note that this would still be so if there actually is no such thing as natural law.Those contingent circumstances, as well as the contingent circumstances of the past evolution of this life form, would explain this biological law. This would be an example of a contingent biological law about ravens. — Pierre
Sue was born and continues to live with hunger and needs of various kinds. These facts account for most of Sue's whereabouts and situational posturing. Whether her deliberation has any bearing on her location is broadly speaking the very issue under discussion.If, on the other hand, it follows from some set of laws of physics that Sue -- a mature rational human being -- must do A in situation C, then, if Sue additionally had some intelligible reason to do A, it is usually as a result of Sue's exercise of her rational powers of practical deliberation that she found herself in a situation C such that the laws of physics ensure that she would decide to do A. — Pierre
On edit: actually, reading further into the SEP article, it seems that logical possibility isn't sufficient for freedom, according to Leibniz; one also needs to act in accordance with one's complete individual concept (as determined by God -- who ensured that the best possible world was actualized) and this actuality is certain albeit logically contingent. See the last paragraph in section 4 of the SEP article linked above. — Pierre-Normand
I haven't seen anything to suggest that the Leibnizian conception is really compatibilist, other than misrepresentations, like Mongrel's. I have no faith in compatibilist accounts, from what I've seen, free will and determinism are genuinely incompatible, and to make them appear compatible requires self-deception, misrepresenting one concept or the other, or both.Do you take this to be an objection to the Leibnizian conception of freedom, specifically, or to compatibilist accounts of free will generally? — Pierre-Normand
Sue was born and continues to live with hunger and needs of various kinds. These facts account for most of Sue's whereabouts and situational posturing. Whether her deliberation has any bearing on her location is broadly speaking the very issue under discussion. — Mongrel
So this is the next point, and this is what makes free will so difficult to prove. Not only must both P and not-P be logically possible, but also the free willing agent must be capable of proceeding with either one of the actions, P or not-P. If the free willist chooses P, and proceeds, the determinist will say that was determined, and if the free willist chooses not-P, the determinist will say that was determined. It is impossible for the free willist to choose, and proceed with both actions, P and not-P, so it appears impossible for the free willist to prove that one is capable of proceeding with either P or not-P. Even if the free-willist flips a coin to decide to proceed with P or not-P, this does not prove free will. — Metaphysician Undercover
I haven't seen anything to suggest that the Leibnizian conception is really compatibilist, other than misrepresentations, like Mongrel's. I have no faith in compatibilist accounts, from what I've seen, free will and determinism are genuinely incompatible, and to make them appear compatible requires self-deception, misrepresenting one concept or the other, or both. — Metaphysician Undercover
Cool. How is that shown? — Mongrel
I don't think so. Suppose some new discovery reveals to us that the universe couldn't have been any other way (no specifics required... all we need is that such a thing is conceivable. — Mongrel
If it's true that the universe couldn't have been any other way, then laws of physics are necessarily true statements (though we may not have previously known that.) — Mongrel
If it's true that the universe couldn't have been any other way, then laws of physics are necessarily true statements (though we may not have previously known that.) — Mongrel
I can't really imagine how that would be the case, though. How could something be a logical necessity just because it's a metaphysical necessity?Physicists investigate empirical laws of physics. They don't know them to be logically necessary. We may suppose, if you like, that, unbeknownst to us, those laws are logically necessary. In that case, the concepts of logical possibility and physical possibility would be co-extensive. — Pierre-Normand
You really don't have to go past Searle's argument for volition. Extend your index finger. Wiggle it around. QED. — Mongrel
I can't really imagine how that would be the case, though. — Terrapin Station
I was very skeptical about Mongrel's representation of Leibniz' concept of free will. It really didn't seem reasonable to me, that a man of Leibniz' calibre would define free will in this way. — Metaphysician Undercover
I like Searle's explanation. He does argue for free will, and he makes a lot of sense to me. It seems we can't help but think in terms of our responsibility. I love his story about someone going into a restaurant and saying to the waiter, "I'll just wait and see what the universe determines that I'll eat." — anonymous66
It resulted from the fact that his central theses clearly ruled out free will. — Mongrel
Me too. It resulted from the fact that his central theses clearly ruled out free will. — Mongrel
It's interesting that, in their own different ways the philosophies of Descartes, Spinoza and Leibniz all seem to make free will impossible. — John
and thus also seems to rule out compatibilism altogether, since "it takes two to tango", so to speak. — John
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