How does having free will make one any more amenable to reason? With free wiil, you have two initial choices when presented with an argument in reason...
1. Accept the most reasonable argument.
2. Reject the most reasonable argument.
If you choose 2 then you are not amenable to reason. If you reject 2 as a method, then you have only one choice, which is the definition of determinism. — Isaac
But I decided to take up the argument, of my own free will. I could just as easily have not done so. So if my participation is by my own choice, and he then is persuaded, then his response was determined by nothing other than my free choice. — Wayfarer
The results of evolution are not the product of necessity, but regardless, free will is not an illusion- it just isn't what you think it is. Free will means that we can make choices, do what we want. We do what we are disposed to do, and these dispositions include beliefs, desires, bodily urges, and short term impulses. All of these are consistent with determinism.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
But think about this. The same idea can be represented in a huge variety of different ways - different languages, different media, and so on - yet still convey exactly the same information. So I say that information can be represented physically, but that essentially it's something other than physical. — Wayfarer
Do ideas in different languages convey exactly the same information? — Kippo
It turns out that genes can embody high level abstractions such as “do what it takes to form an eye.” Pluck out the Eyes Absent gene from a mouse and insert it into the genome of a fruitfly whose eyeless gene is missing, and you get a fruit-fly with eyes. Not mouse eyes, mind you, but fruit-fly eyes, which are built along totally different lines. A mouse eye, like yours or mine, has a single lens which focuses light on the retina. A fruit-fly has a compound eye, made up of thousands of lenses in tubes, like a group of tightly packed telescopes. About the only thing the eyes have in common: are that they are for seeing.
What does this tell us? Information, organized into concepts, is demonstrably out there in the world, and without violating the laws of physics it can guide processes as they unfold. As in the genes, so in the mind.
Most people don't believe in determinism or that biology explains and predicts everything we will do, — jamesfive
I don’t see how strict determinism can be defended in light of uncertainty. — Wayfarer
well all sorts of sub themes inevitably popped up. I wish we could have branches to threads - perhaps limited to one or two ply. ATM it seems that many threads effectively have them anyway, in a messy sort of way.Anyway, the OP seems to have lost interest. — Wayfarer
Biological determism is certainly true to an extent - there is no controversy there - only disagreement as to how much culture and randomness affect behaviour. — Kippo
The real world doesn't work in words, and definitions. For example, consciousness can be present in different species to a greater or lesser extent; also in individuals of the same species exhibiting varying degrees of trauma to the brain. Biological determism is the domain of science. It has nothing to do with free will, which is logically compatible with biological knowledge - (even if possibly not a proven or scientifically meaningful entity). Just because you believe in free will you don't have to jettison the findings of science - for example that babies (and adults) are hardwired to respond to faces and smiles; snake shapes etc etc.Exceptions render the rule meaningless, and "true to an extent", really indicates that the rule is false. — Metaphysician Undercover
Try ducking (www.duckduckgo :smile: ) "Heisenberg and uncertainty" . — Kippo
The real world doesn't work in words, and definitions. — Kippo
Biological determism is the domain of science. It has nothing to do with free will, which is logically compatible with biological knowledge — Kippo
No it doesn't. The behavior may be due to a complex set of factors that are unobserved or unobservable. As an extreme example, consider a deterministic account of a human choice: it is determined by the prior beliefs (short and long term), desires, dispositions, transient urges ....If a creature is observed to act in a certain way, due to habit, then we might make a rule concerning that activity. One might call this "biological determinism". But when the creature displays the capacity to break the habit, then the claim of "determinism" is falsified — Metaphysician Undercover
QM is sure weird, and I wouldn't be surprised if causality as we know it vanishes at some point. But I am not "afraid" of strict determinism - it doesn't "scare" me, probably because I have happily accepted materialism. — Kippo
I suggest that we regard the paradoxes of quantum physics as a metaphor for the unknown infinite possibilities of our own existence. This is poignantly and elegantly expressed in the Vedas: “As is the atom, so is the universe; as is the microcosm, so is the macrocosm; as is the human body, so is the cosmic body; as is the human mind, so is the cosmic mind.”
No it doesn't. The behavior may be due to a complex set of factors that are unobserved or unobservable. — Relativist
As an extreme example, consider a deterministic account of a human choice: it is determined by the prior beliefs (short and long term), desires, dispositions, transient urges .... — Relativist
It's argument from ignorance to insist there are no causes just because we're ignorant of them.But that's just invoking magic, claiming unobservable causes. — Metaphysician Undercover
You're focusing too much on the unobservable. I also said they can just be unobserved. You were claiming determinism is falsified by observing a behavioral pattern to be broken. You're wrong, because we may simply be unaware of all the factors that collectively cause the behavior, some of which are less frequent.This is not a good example of unobservable causes, because these causes are observable, to the person acting. They are not properly unobservable. And when they are properly observed these things are understood to influence actions (affect them) but not cause them. — Metaphysician Undercover
You're focusing too much on the unobservable. I also said they can just be unobserved. You were claiming determinism is falsified by observing a behavioral pattern to be broken. You're wrong, because we may simply be unaware of all the factors that collectively cause the behavior, some of which are less frequent. — Relativist
News to me, and sounds like an odd definition. Determinism, as typically used, is ontological or metaphysical. You're defining it epistemologically. Is this your personal definition, or is this a standard I've never heard of?Biological determinism is dependent on what is known to biology, — Metaphysician Undercover
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