This is a totally different thing. You didn't mention anything like this in your description of your topic, which referred to options in general, in fact, to all kinds of options ...So this had to do with the idea that we have no option for "no option" when it comes to being born. — schopenhauer1
I'm not convinced that we had no option regarding birth. I can see souls sitting around, bored out of their minds with eternity and infinity. And, while not necessarily uncomfortable with being All, they decide they want to drill down on being a part of All instead of All itself. After all, someone has to do it. So they say "This time I'll be that (person, place or thing)." And presto! It happens. Their memory may be wiped for having made the decision (it wouldn't be you if you started out with a slate full of knowledge, and life is learning, after all) and so they start anew.
Some go on to whine about not having been given a choice. But that's cool too. Maybe, as a soul, they said "I'd like to live and not like it. I'd like to live and blame someone else, like my parents. Someone has to do it." — James Riley
This "new stuff" refers to the known "No one asked me if I wanted to be born!" This indeed indicates a lack of option, a "no option", as you call it. We can say then that "no option" indicates a forced action. It can also indicate something less realistic: Fate! A lot of people believe that all things, their life etc. are predetermind, already preplanned. So, they believe that they actually have no choices in their life! Consequently, they believe that there's no such a thing as free will! How sad! — Alkis Piskas
Right but this just has all the problems with hard determinism. — schopenhauer1
I don't see a problem. And I don't see a map that can't be ignored. In consideration of All, choice can still remain while not running afoul of it. Literally anything is possible, and not, at the same time. Not knowing, having the slate wiped clean, is the beauty of it. — James Riley
I don't think this answers the objections I raised about the distinction between the daily life and meta determinism problem. You will still act in such a way that people can choose. — schopenhauer1
Maybe instinct isn't the best term of use, but I don't think preference is the right one either. I suspect children typically represent hope. When all other reasons are lost, it's the children we're told we have to look out for. The hope for a better tomorrow, this is a life-long project for people. To take that away from them would be tantamount to the destruction of their entire reason for being, probably many would find it cruel. — darthbarracuda
I agree with you that never being born is preferable to being born, because life is truly rotten. But because it is so rotten, I think it is understandable why people would cling to something - anything - to make it less rotten, even if it means bringing someone else into the mess. If you figured out how to get by without having kids, that's cool, good for you, but not everyone wants to live without hope. What do you propose we substitute, if not children? — darthbarracuda
We keep tumbling into the next generation, children are born because their parents were born because their parents were born because their parents were born...the best any person can do, if they can find it in themselves, is to not have children and accept that there is no hope. That is a very bleak worldview and so it is not surprising that most people will reject it, and I don't think we can blame them. — darthbarracuda
OK, I read that reply of yours. Not much illuminating, but it's OK.Same response as to James Riley. — schopenhauer1
OK, I read that reply of yours. Not much illuminating, but it's OK.
The bottom line / question is ... "Do you have a free will or not?" — Alkis Piskas
Well, it's not the only option ... You might also think that you were predestined to write this reply and what exactly to write! :grin:Does it matter, if the only default is to think I do? — schopenhauer1
Well, it's not the only option ... You might also think that you were predestined to write this reply and what exactly to write! :grin: — Alkis Piskas
I also think, as I was saying to someone earlier, people in general don't think about thinks in a philosophically "robust" way. It gives them some sort of purpose and way to fill their life. — schopenhauer1
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