The classical theory of freedom views it as free will which further on is the ability/right to freely choose. This principle can be transferred to the metaphysical level, discussing if there are metaphysical causes adverse to free choice. Metaphysical entities are not obvious and we can only speculate if they have or don't have real effect on our choices. Empirical causes are obvious and our free or forced choice is evident to every person. So my question is, which point of view is more important in libertarianism. Should libertarianism be metaphysical or empirical. How this distinction is related to the question of religion, and is it necessary for libertarians to be atheists. The opposite to freedom empirically is dependence, slavery. Are we slaves to God as well? Is it good or we should rebel? — lepriçok
I don't understand how you're using the terms "metaphysical" and "empirical." It doesn't seem to resemble how I use those terms or what I'd say conventional usage is in an academic context. — Terrapin Station
My usage should be obvious - there is a physical world and a metaphysical one. The physical world is sensory, or empirical, whereas metaphysical is supersensory. Philosophers argue what these two realities are — lepriçok
The universe is only semi-deterministic as there is so much contingency everywhere. Ayer pointed out that an obstacle to free will is constraint, not "determinism". — Fine Doubter
So what does it mean to say that we can "transfer" something like the freedom issue to "the metaphysical level," and what would metaphysical causality be (in other words, what would a specific example of it be)? — Terrapin Station
Here's a recent post of mine explaining the standard academic philosophical definition of metaphysics, by the way: — Terrapin Station
So where, in your opinion, these first principles reside? — lepriçok
Has being or existence layers that are beyond physics? — lepriçok
(And as another "warning," most "information" talk strikes me as a bunch of gobbledygook.) — Terrapin Station
What is free will, if we have one. — lepriçok
the "there is no free will" crowd always wants to appeal to it being a standard view or implication of the sciences that there is no free will. — Terrapin Station
Although brains obey quantum mechanics, they do not seem to exploit any of its special features. Molecular machines, such as the light-amplifying components of photoreceptors, pre- and post-synaptic receptors and the voltage- and ligand-gated channel proteins that span cellular membranes and underpin neuronal excitability, are so large that they can be treated as classical objects. — Koch C., Hepp K. (2006). Quantum mechanics in the brain. Nature
The point of the subject was to relate the question of freedom, free will to the problem of political order. Libertarianism should assume the narrower, reductionist understanding or the broader, 'metaphysical' one? Which is more appropriate in our days? Or is it just an illusory, impossible ideology?
I don't even buy that there can be energy "on its own," by the way. Energy obtains via the relative motion of physical objects.
(And as another "warning," most "information" talk strikes me as a bunch of gobbledygook.) — Terrapin Station
That's because it completely is the standard view of the sciences, when it comes to brain function. — Isaac
simply put the structure is 1(entire reality 2(our knowledge, constructs and suppositions)). For 1 - it is my 'meta', for 2 - your reductionist materialism. If 1 and 2 is 100%, — lepriçok
If only that were what I was referring to (for one).
Also, if only the idea were just about quantum mechanics. — Terrapin Station
Oh dear. Its never not about you and your ideas is it? Read my post and tell me where my response has anything whatsoever to do with what your crazy ideas are or are not about. — Isaac
Again huh? That doesn't seem "simply put." It seems like pretty gobbledygooky with a bunch of assumptions (including re just what I'm claiming) that aren't justifiable. — Terrapin Station
The threat of jail or punishment is not the same as being thrown in jail or punishment, but it no less indicates a possible future. — NOS4A2
You quoted me and responded as if you were disagreeing with what I said. But your comment didn't actually address what I said. — Terrapin Station
If the present state of an object is known it is possible to predict by the laws of classical mechanics how it will move in the future (determinism) and how it has moved in the past (reversibility).
So what. It can't be an actual imposition on liberty because is has no causal effect. It's only a imposition on liberty if I believe the threat, so why don't I just not believe it and then no problem. Seems like it's all the fault of the listener constraining their own liberty by choosing to believe threats.
How this distinction is related to the question of religion, and is it necessary for libertarians to be atheists. — lepriçok
Are we slaves to God as well? — lepriçok
Is it good or we should rebel? — lepriçok
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