My first question is do you believe that the illusion of free will was a necessary evil for the advancement and survival of the human race? — jamesfive
In which case, what’s the point of responding? Because no matter what I say, you’re not amenable to reason; you’re only ever going to respond according to your conditioning. — Wayfarer
How does having free will make one any more amenable to reason? — Isaac
how incredibly complex the design of some living things are and how unlikely life was to even begin. — jamesfive
Biology is the wrong level to consider determinism - surely it is a physics question — Kippo
The OP — Wayfarer
I thought this topic was about full on, absolute determinsm right down to all the details of all the particles in the universe at any time in the future — Kippo
So if our biology determines that we will seek the most rational argument, how does that make it pointless you presenting one? — Isaac
The ‘sovereignty of reason’ means that if you seek to explain reason in any other terms - biological or whatever - then you’re undermining it. Reason comprises the relationship of ideas, and ideas are not physical — Wayfarer
So, if you were to 'reason' that four is more than two, you're saying a computer couldn’t successfully agree or disagree with that notion on the basis of its programming? — Isaac
If what you write is determined by endocrines or hormones or genes, then how could what anyone says change it? — Wayfarer
Reality is in some fundamental sense indeterminate. — Wayfarer
It would be insane to argue that our biology literally determines everything we do. — Isaac
biology controls everything — jamesfive
Do we still enjoy tv shows/movies where there's a good guy and a bad guy knowing that there's really no such thing as "good" and "bad"? — jamesfive
If I apply heat to a plastic spoon it's shape changes. Are you suggesting that spoons think? — Isaac
We didn't have to invoke free-will for the heat to affect the shape of the spoon, why do we need to invoke it for your words to affect what I write in response? — Isaac
In any case, one needn't have any emotional difficulty with accepting the possibility of full blown determinism because our experience of free will in a determined universe is indistinguishable from our experience of "true" free will. — Kippo
But as you have indicated, every idea has a physical counterpart. So there is no idea that exists independently of physical reality.Reason comprises the relationship of ideas, and ideas are not physical, — Wayfarer
In which case, what difference does {full blown determinsm] make, and how could you find out? Either way, it is, as I said, a pretty meaningless argument. — Wayfarer
So your answer to the question "why do we need to invoke free-will here? " is "because its obvious"? — Isaac
But as you have indicated, every idea has a physical counterpart. So there is no idea that exists independently of physical reality. — Kippo
Which is still pretty good though! — Kippo
I made an argument, which you so far have given no indication of having understood. — Wayfarer
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