To deny the power of words could be a defensive stance taken as a means to exonerate someone from bearing the responsibility of the results stemming from their own word use(free speech). It is self-defeating. In order for it work, the defender and/or defendant uses the power of words(free speech) to convince the jury that words(free speech) have no power. The key to defeat such a defense is to point this out to the jury.
I’m not sure what you mean by neurological processes being at the mercy of biology...they are part of your biology. This biology is triggered and effected by abstract symbols as well as other biological processes. Symbols we recognise have an effect on our thoughts and actions. You call it sorcery, but it’s only sorcery in the way an ipad is sorcery to a caveman.
I understand your point about knowledge, understanding and language...these are the sorts of biological processes that you referenced right? There are internal things effecting action as well as external. Sometimes (maybe most of the time) the internal things can override the external but saying the external has no effect in the way you are is incorrect. It’s both. It’s dynamic.
Glyphs may not cause you to understand them but they do cause certain neurological outcomes if you do recognise them. The degree to which they do effect action is certainly debatable, but that they do is well established.
I think you can recognise that and still maintain your free speech absolutism but your argument that it’s fanciful, magical thinking to claim words effect action doesn’t hold up.
I don’t deny that the environment effects the body, and that words exist in the environment. My only contention is that it is the biology that causes us to recognize, interpret and supply meaning to symbols, give them “power” so to speak. — NOS4A2
My going to the shop could be determined by a neurological process (my decision) which is under my control — Janus
go to the shop because i am determined by neurological processes beyond my control — Janus
No evidence of any causation anywhere gets any better than this. — Janus
in which case determinism would be a fantasy and there would be no problem for human freedom. — Janus
To deny the power of words could be a defensive stance taken as a means to exonerate someone from bearing the responsibility of the results stemming from their own word use(free speech). It is self-defeating. In order for it work, the defender and/or defendant uses the power of words(free speech) to convince the jury that words(free speech) have no power. The key to defeat such a defense is to point this out to the jury.
Well, yes, that’s the point. — NOS4A2
What’s the difference? How do you determine if you are “in control” or not?
Does the fact that it is your brain, and that you are doing what you want make you in control? Even if the processes of said brain decide your actions in full and are deterministic? — khaled
False. A color change always precedes reaching the equilibrium point in titration. Doesn’t mean the color change is causing the pH change. — khaled
Randomness does not mean freedom. You’re not “more free” upon the discovery that when you want to raise your arm, your arm sometimes rises as opposed to always rises. — khaled
I'm less inclined to agree that people always have a choice, but I think we both agree that folk bear responsibility for what they do.
The insurrection attempt...
Do you find that all the leaders perpetuating the big lie(that the election was stolen, that there was widespread election fraud, that Trump actually won, etc.) and the individual insurrectionists are responsible? — creativesoul
For me being in control entails that your decision is not wholly determined by anything else, — Janus
It also entails that the you that makes the decision is not reducible to neural processes, otherwise you would not be free at all. — Janus
The point was that it is only the fact that something is always correlated with an event that gives us reason to think it is the cause — Janus
We cannot prove that our decisions are determined by antecedent events, but we cannot prove they are not either. — Janus
Would you consider A an efficient cause of B if A always precedes B, yet doesn’t cause it? — khaled
Is your own brain something “else”? That’s the question. You seem like you’re treating your own brain as a stranger. — khaled
So, are you proposing that you can make some decision without neural processes? — khaled
Sure but there are also reasons to think the mind isn’t the cause. — khaled
But you didn’t answer my question:
Would you consider A an efficient cause of B if A always precedes B, yet doesn’t cause it? — khaled
The keys exert power, no matter what’s written on them. — NOS4A2
there are in fact connections between one recognising symbols and ones actions. This isn’t controversial, there are plenty of studies and research to support that idea. If it seems fanciful and absurd to you it’s because you are ignorant of how these neurological processes interact with words and information. — DingoJones
I can say to myself "raise my arm" as many times as I like and unfailingly my arm will rise (if nothing is physically restraining it). No evidence of any causation anywhere gets any better than this. — Janus
Are you claiming that decisions have no physical correlates? If they do, then where is the problem? Accepting that a decision has a physical correlate (which it should given that it is a brain activity) then a decision can be the efficient cause of an act. — Janus
The notion of determinism works in understanding (most) observable physical processes, but the assumption that all neural processes (or even all physical processes) are fully determined by antecedent processes is just that, nothing but an assumption; a matter of faith. — Janus
What I'm trying to impart is that I don't buy the idea that all neurological processes are completely determined by antecedent neurological processes. If they were then we would not be in control of our decisions. — Janus
How do we know that energy all across the universe is conserved? — Janus
What makes you think the laws you referred to apply to the mind? — Janus
You're asking me whether I would consider something that doesn't cause some event to be the efficient cause of that event? — Janus
If you guys want to buy into misplaced scientistic dogma, be my guest. I'll trust my own experience any day. — Janus
that all physical, and more relevantly neural, processes must be deterministic. — Janus
To be free is to be determined by the self — Janus
Decisions are not random because there is a purposeful intelligence in play. — Janus
In what way 'misplaced'? — Isaac
You tell me, — Olivier5
Modern science has got passed this belief, and is resolutely undeterministic — Olivier5
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