The problem is that such metaphysical inference is untenable on several grounds. For starters, there is nothing about the parameters of material arrangements—say, the position and momentum of the atoms constituting our brain—in terms of which we could deduce, at least in principle, how it feels to fall in love, to taste wine, or to listen to a Vivaldi sonata.
in that quoted passage Dennett says that molecular machinery is the basis of agency, meaning and consciousness in the universe; he doesn't say that agency, meaning and consciousness don't exist — Janus
:up: :100:How it feels to be in love cannot be explained or "deduced"; that is a silly idea. It may be described or evoked in literature, but it will obviously never be a part of physics. Who would ever imagine that it could be? It would simply be a category error. Spinoza understood this point nearly 400 years ago. — Janus
t seems surprising that Nagel would misunderstand him; which makes me think it is perhaps a wilful misunderstanding that affords Nagel a good sensationalist target that he can then seek to refute in a (he might hope) best-selling book. — Janus
I really don't know, — Janus
Dennett arguing that [free will] does exist, but is compatible with determinism; — Janus
I really don't know, — Janus
Plainly! So stop telling me that I don't understand what I'm talking about. Thomas Nagel is a serious philosopher, with a long publishing history. Daniel Dennett is a one-trick pony with only a single string in his bow. — Wayfarer
I've been telling him that – less well said – for over a decade. Some woo-folks just seem to "feel" objectivity is a bug rather than a feature of modern science (or naturalism).For me what is objective just is what can be corroborated inter-subjectively, so it's not a view from nowhere, but from nowhere in particular. To be objective is to be free from bias and wishful thinking. — Janus
↪jgill
I had the understanding that quantum physics had obliged science to allow for the role of the observer in the conducting of experiments - the 'observer problem' — Wayfarer
(Wikipedia)Despite the "observer effect" in the double-slit experiment being caused by the presence of an electronic detector, the experiment's results have unfortunately been misinterpreted by some to suggest that a conscious mind can directly affect reality.
Dennett arguing that it does exist, but is compatible with determinism; — Janus
Compatibilism is self-deception. It's usually composed of a false representation of "free will", which makes free will an illusion, but it can also be composed of a false representation of determinism, like soft determinism, or its composed of both false representations. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. That distinction is relevant, in that technical "explanations" tell us How something works mechanically. But an "interpretation" of the same observation is an attempt to make sense of the How, in terms that are meaningful to non-specialists, including academic philosophers without laboratories. It always helps understanding to know something about Why it works like that. "How" is narrow & specific, while "Why" is broader & more general.↪Gnomon
In my understanding, explaining some physical transformation manifested as a testable mathematical model is indispensible for doing science whereas interpreting such explanatory models and what the outcomes of testing them 'imply' about some aspect of the world (and, perhaps, the human condition) is doing philosophy. — 180 Proof
I believe that free will is compatible with a non-fully-predetermined world (it would also be compatible with a fully predetermined world). — Olivier5
It's like the Copenhagen Interpretation of the mind-boggling implications of Quantum Theory, except that their canonical version was intended to explain its absurdities & anomalies for the experts, not the general public. — Gnomon
But of course, if you so much as refer to any of that, then you're 'peddling woo'. — Wayfarer
Science is metaphysics which works and is reliably objective — 180 Proof
A "non-fully predetermined" world is not compatible with a "fully predetermined world", so how could "free will" be compatible with both of these? — Metaphysician Undercover
It means that determinism is neither here nor there. It makes no difference to the issue of free will. It doesn't matter. — Olivier5
Compatibilism is perfectly fine and logical. — Olivier5
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.