 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         Well if SATs are at that level then the answer to your question would be that I would have answered what the question was asking and not what it was not asking. Obviously. Otherwise I would not have got into university. What a stupid question. — Isaac
 alcontali
alcontali         
         This is true only if we decide to leave out objective reality in our logic. If you base logic on what really is/occurs around you, than it is 'speculative' only to the extent you don't trust your senses and their interpretation. — lepriçok
These are not axioms, rather basic truths of life that everyone agrees with. This solves your problem. Reason and logic must be grounded in this reality to avoid the speculative catastrophe — lepriçok
We have to take it on blind trust. — lepriçok
 Fine Doubter
Fine Doubter         
          Pfhorrest
Pfhorrest         
         I believe necessity (in an occurrence) is a special case of contingency. — Fine Doubter
 Isaac
Isaac         
         ?? You just said you didn't take the SAT. You're not in the US apparently. — Terrapin Station
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         Perhaps you should improve your reading comprehension skills. — Isaac
 Isaac
Isaac         
         See my SAT score. — Terrapin Station
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         So now academic achievement is a measure of relevant intellectual skills. — Isaac
 Isaac
Isaac         
         (1) SAT is a standardized test that's taken on one occasion; it's evaluated "blindly," and by machines. Obtaining a degree is a long process that isn't standardized, and there are lots of different subjective, biased factors involved. — Terrapin Station
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         Where have I said anything to the contrary? — Isaac
 Isaac
Isaac         
         Via conflating my comments about academic achievement and its implications for intelligence (which you're reading overly "literally") with a comment (that you also read overly "literally") about the SAT. — Terrapin Station
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         "Where?" was the question, not "how?". — Isaac
 Isaac
Isaac         
         I quoted the comment in question right above the content of mine we're talking about. — Terrapin Station
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         Yes, I'm just asking which quote, you've quoted several. — Isaac
 Deleted User
Deleted User         
         If you are talking about qm effects or patterns, these are not deterministic, but so far I haven't heard how these could lead to freedom. They are not chosen, nor is there any evidence, yet, that the variablity in qm can be utilized by a conscious being. As in, out of the range of possible the wave function options I collapsed it in this way. And my choice was not determined by previous experiences I've had and/or my nature. I don't see any evidence yet that non-deterministic processes in science support any free will theory.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. — Terrapin Station
 Isaac
Isaac         
         The passage that starts with "(1) SAT is a standardized test . . . " followed me quoting a single, eleven-word sentence of yours. — Terrapin Station
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         If you are talking about qm effects or patterns, these are not deterministic, but so far I haven't heard how these could lead to freedom. — Coben
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         It's about the fact that you reference paragraphs which cover degree-level topics as being understandable with SAT-level comprehension skills. — Isaac
 Deleted User
Deleted User         
          Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         blah, blah, posturing. — Coben
Stochastic processes have a random element. How does random translate into free will. — Coben
I am no expert in whether stochastic models are ontologically non-deterministic — Coben
 Isaac
Isaac         
         What are you reading the above way? — Terrapin Station
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         Instead of explaining why it's not a contradiction/incoherent, or heaven forbid, actually admitting that you might just be a tiny bit wrong about something, you just say that my reading comprehension (SAT-level) is at fault. — Isaac
 Isaac
Isaac         
         Because every response of yours is based on not being able to read or reason very well. — Terrapin Station
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         Yes, this whole sub-discussion started when I asked you to support that assertion, and why you proceed with it (despite the complete absence of any unbiased evidence) — Isaac
o, if your only evidence that someone lacks comprehension or reasoning skills is that they question the coherence or consistency of what you say, — Isaac
 Isaac
Isaac         
          Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         Fine, if the best you've got by way of intelligent discussion is just to label every disagreement as a reading comprehension issue — Isaac
 Isaac
Isaac         
         Stochastic processes have a random element. How does random translate into free will. — Coben
 Deleted User
Deleted User         
         1. Stochastic processes are a modelling method, — Isaac
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         Stochastic processes are a modelling method, no-one is claiming that they actually are random — Isaac
The passage I quoted showed that the scientific opinion on the brain is that it acts as a classical (non-stochastic) system. — Isaac
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         it still wouldn't help his position — Coben
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