Innately. All my life I haven't learned a thing, at most I've just remembered things.Then how did you arrive at this conclusion? — leo
Well, regardless if these minds are free or not - they can't act outside of these laws.By mind-independent world I mean a world that exists even if there are no minds in it, in which everything behaves according to laws including the minds. If we assume that in a mind-independent world minds follow such laws, then minds have an influence on the world in the sense that they are a part of the world that follows laws that act upon other parts of the world, but they don't have an influence on the world in the sense that they can't act outside of these laws.
So the fundamental question is, can we do things that doesn't follow these laws or not? I'm saying that if we are assuming we are part of an objective reality (which implicitly assumes that everything behaves according to unchanging laws, even if these laws include some randomness, and we're just observing parts of it), then it immediately follows that we are assuming we can't do anything outside of these laws, we can't even act on the randomness in these laws, we don't have free will. — leo
I don't see how they're mutually exclusive - I see one arising from the other.I don't see how we could assume objective reality and free will at the same time. — leo
Innately. All my life I haven't learned a thing, at most I've just remembered things. — Shamshir
There is flux and flux allows you to not follow laws. Flux is objective and so a law. Hence the mind is ambivalent. Hence you have free will - and your free will has borders. — Shamshir
I don't see how they're mutually exclusive - I see one arising from the other. — Shamshir
in which everything behaves according to laws including the minds. — leo
Anyone who'd know that innately, would know what I know innately and would validate my claim.How would you respond to someone who would claim they know innately that the world is not mind-independent? — leo
It can transmute laws, and by that process not follow them.Are you saying the mind can choose to not follow laws? — leo
Free will persists thanks to an objective reality and objective reality persists thanks to freedom.You see objective reality as arising from free will? But then if that reality was willed it does not exist independently of us, it is not objective, which is why I don't see how they are not exclusive. — leo
"There is a mind-independent world" is another way of saying that there are things that exist aside from our minds. It's not saying that we can't influence the mind-independent world. — Terrapin Station
"Mind-independent world" doesn't imply realism about laws, and it doesn't imply strong determinism. — Terrapin Station
Do you agree with the idea that in a mind-independent world, minds are part of that world? — leo
Then do you agree with the idea that in a mind-independent world, there are constraints to how things can move and what minds can do? — leo
Even if people can make the conundrum seem a little less absurd by claiming you can interact with a mind independent world, they will nonetheless end up being unable to explain adequately the process by which such interaction is even possible. (they have been trying for 400 years and yet here we are.). — Arne
All that does is beg the question as to where the "magic" occurs. — Arne
None of what you say comes even close to explaining how a non-physical thought — Arne
Unless you are suggesting that your thoughts are physical, in which case you are rejecting the notion of an external reality — Arne
1. The very notion of "objective" is rooted in substance ontology, i.e., the subject/object distinction. — Arne
I disagree. — Arne
And you have already rejected the notion of the relationship as being between two self-sufficient substances.
Unless I am missing something, you avoid the Cartesian nightmare by being a non-Cartesian, i.e., you are a materialist. — Arne
Correct. I'm a materialist/physicalist. — Terrapin Station
Minds aren't technically part of the mind-independent world, but they're part of a world that mostly consists of mind-independent stuff. — Terrapin Station
Yes, but I'm not actually a realist on physical laws; at least not as physical laws are usually characterized. — Terrapin Station
Well, if someone can figure out a way to make the notion of a nonphysical something/anything coherent, that would be a start. ;-) — Terrapin Station
One doesn't have to believe that physical things are deterministic. — Terrapin Station
The free will I care about is the ability to choose between a tuna and a turkey sandwich, or between which of a handful of movies to watch, etc. — Terrapin Station
Sure, but if your mind is physical and follows indeterministic laws, — leo
Aside from "indeterministic laws" being a questionable idea in general, why would one have to believe in indeterministic laws? — Terrapin Station
In any event, it could work that you're able to bias probabilities. — Terrapin Station
Children do not learn that books exist, that armchairs exist, etc.,etc. - they learn to fetch ... Are we to say that the knowledge that there are physical objects comes very early or very late?
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But can’t it be imagined that there should be no physical objects? I don’t know. And yet “there are physical objects” is nonsense. Is it supposed to be an empirical proposition?—And is this an empirical proposition: “There seem to be physical objects”?
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“A is a physical object” is a piece of instruction which we give only to someone who doesn’t yet understand either what “A” means, or what “physical object” means. Thus it is instruction about the use of words, and “physical object” is a logical concept. (Like colour, quantity, …) And that is why no such proposition as: “There are physical objects” can be formulated. Yet we encounter such unsuccessful shots at every turn. — On Certainty
I'll agreethe assumption that there is a mind-independent objective reality arguably entails that there are objective limits to the freedom of individual sentient agents. But I see no reason to suppose that freedom must be somehow absolute or in every conceivable respect unlimited in order to count as freedom.Isn't it the case that as soon as we assume there is such a thing as an objective reality, a mind-independent world we are a part of, then we are necessarily assuming the absence of free will already?
Because if we assume we belong to a mind-independent world, then that world doesn't depend on our minds, so our minds don't have an influence on it, and so we don't have free will.
Is there anything wrong in this reasoning? — leo
If one assumes there is an objective reality in which there are constraints, how could one believe in anything else than deterministic or indeterministic laws to describe these constraints? — leo
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