This time put squarely, I can tell you what's really gobbledygooky https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_equations_in_quantum_mechanics
A pretty load, huh?
Can you justify that? Or somebody told you? I know there's 'probability'... — lepriçok
specifically that they consider causal determinism with regards to decision-making capacities in the brain to be the standard scientific consensus — Isaac
because it is a widely held view among a large proportion of modern scientists that the elements involved in brain activity are large enough to be treated as classical objects, — Isaac
Some right-libertarians consider the non-aggression principle to be a core part of their beliefs. — alcontali
Still, choosing not to be, has consequences. — alcontali
However, I still recognize that libertarianism is not a complete moral system. It is not the complete answer. — alcontali
Maybe it's a language issue. — Terrapin Station
So why do you think libertarianism should be about threats to liberty when such threats do not in any way constrain the liberty of the listener?
There's no necessity to fall back on anything, because libertarians use common sense morality, not based on any metaphysical doctrine. — lepriçok
Can God be immoral, if he does, why doesn't he choose to be immoral. — lepriçok
I think that libertarian ethics are optimal for modern times, because other systems just add other unnecessary objects of transgression and forbidden types of action that are too restrictive to have a comfortable, yet pacifist life. — lepriçok
but I'm not going to play "guess what the fuck Terrapin is talking about" — Isaac
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. That's wrong, though. The "there is no free will" crowd should have looked at what was going on in the sciences after the mid-1800s — Terrapin Station
Free will obtains via the fact that the world is not strongly deterministic. The standard view in the sciences, by the way, is that the world is not strongly deterministic, where that's been the standard view for over 150 years now, but somehow the message isn't getting through. In online forums like this, everyone still seems to think that it's the early 1800s and they're supporting Laplace for president. (See "Laplace's demon" if you don't know what I'm talking about.) — Terrapin Station
The term "common-sense morality" creates the impression of referring to something rather undocumented. — alcontali
Does the set of all sets that do not contain themselves, contain itself? The 1905 Russell's paradox has a long history, but I have rarely run into anybody who actually feels like learning from it. That represents 100+ years of progress in dealing with paradoxes thrown out of the window ... — alcontali
So, according to you a functioning system of rules is not needed because that would be "too restrictive"? What about systems of arithmetic, such as Dedekind-Peano, Robinson, Presburger, or Skolem's systems? Are their rules also "too restrictive"? These systems may be considered relatively "hard" but that is a feature, and not a bug. — alcontali
Systems tend to be indeed difficult to learn, but I learn them anyway. I have always handsomely benefited from that view. — alcontali
Everyone, guided by the main libertarian framework, can document their moral principles themselves. — lepriçok
We have totalitarianism, communism, fascism, statism, eugenics, social Darwinism, elitism that have all sorts of ethics rules that serve only the needs of narrow groups and do nothing good to humanity. — lepriçok
that can only be extrapolated to mean that a standard view of science is that there is no free will if you assume an incompatibilist concept of free will — Pfhorrest
I am very wary and also suspicious of the refusal to commit to an immutable set of documentation. That practice allows people to claim a thing and tomorrow the very opposite of that thing. So, no, I am very opposed to that. — alcontali
What these false ideologies all have in common, is that they are not documented in a firmly established system of rules, i.e. a sound theory. That is why these things are mere bullshit. — alcontali
We have written laws — lepriçok
I posted a quote from an article describing the standard view of neuroscience as being that quantum indeterminacy has no effect on brain processes, which can be treated a classical objects. You said that had nothing to do with it. My quote certainly represented the view of 'the sciences' with regards to quantum indeterminacy and free-will, so the only other option to explain its supposed irrelevancy would be if you were not talking about the discoveries of quantum mechanics, but instead some other scientific advance from the mid 1800s which supports free-will. — Isaac
I already addressed this. If your reading comprehension didn't suck you'd know that. — Terrapin Station
Right. And we know it's my reading comprehension that's at fault and not the quality of your counter-argument how, exactly? — Isaac
A central belief in Islam is that politicians, elected or not, have no authority to invent new laws because God has invented all the laws already. This makes such continuous freedom-encroachment process impossible. — alcontali
I think that it is a rather strict system, which allows very little for freedom — lepriçok
For instance, what does Islam say about religious freedom, and by its norms, am I allowed to choose my creed, or not to believe in God at all. If Islam doesn't allow this, it has little relevance in libertarianism. — lepriçok
Another problem is that there could be distinguished God as the source of moral law and human reason as the source moral law. The first is very speculative, therefore easily refuted using strict logic and empirical facts, while human reason is the only trustworthy place of insights into the human nature and the needs of society, for it to prosper. — lepriçok
By continuous examples of you not being able to understand relatively simple sentences. — Terrapin Station
If you want to try to explain supposed problems with the sentence construction instead, you're welcome to suggest that. — Terrapin Station
If you oppose logic to "speculative" belief, it only demonstrates that you do not understand the axiomatic nature of the system of logic. Furthermore, there are no systems, i.e. theories, that do not ultimately rest on "speculative" beliefs. That is simply impossible. — alcontali
Ah, so we know you're the one in the right this time because you also think you were right all the other times. — Isaac
Because you consistently demonstrate that you didn't understand what was written. If the sentences are fine, then your reading comprehension is what's the problem. — Terrapin Station
At any rate, if you need clarification for anything how about asking for clarification rather than arguing? — Terrapin Station
If you actually read what I've written, it explains clearly that sentences are not unambiguously of one clear meaning, but that this is not a fault with the sentence, it is a feature of language. — Isaac
So what did you do on your SATs for the reading comprehension section? — Terrapin Station
It's not "as unambiguous as possible," because you're expected to have commonsense abilities of reading comprehension, so that you could read any average magazine article, newspaper article, etc. and understand both what it's saying and what's it's not saying. — Terrapin Station
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