Life doesn't suck. As the spirit desires so it has — Gregory
He replied, "No, this life is good. It's this body I am tired of — Questioner
I lost my husband 3 years ago to MS. The last couple years of his life were very difficult. At one point, as he was having a lot of trouble making a transfer, I said to him, "Tired of this life?"
He replied, "No, this life is good. It's this body I am tired of." — Questioner
You get what you desire? So that if you get poor outcomes, it's becasue that is what you desire?As the spirit desires so it has — Gregory
Note the passive voice: everything in nature is determined. Determined by what? If human behavior is determined then it needs to be determined by something other than ourselves, or else it is determined by us, which entails free will.
To get around this determinists often posit an abstraction of ourselves to be the determiner of our actions.
It sounds absurd to me that those things have no truth value at all. If that were the case, then why does science work? — Brendan Golledge
My background in biology has me taking the side that says all is random. In nature, there is no such thing as a closed system. There are always random events that impinge upon and influence the outcome of any "cause" in producing its "effect." — Questioner
After it leaves the hand, that is. When it leaves hand isn't determined.This is the same way that a die is technically determined if you do the physics equations to predict how it will fall. — Brendan Golledge
Not 'knowing' (a bad choice of words because we DO NOT 'know' things, but instead we are aware in varying degrees of things) does not have a direct relationship with things being random or determined.In this case, it is effectively random because we don't know the information. — Brendan Golledge
This 'but' is crazy. ANY precondition of perfection, in this case omniscience, requires ALL perfection. So, if you get your precondition, NOTHING ELSE need be mentioned because we are AT perfection.But if we knew all the information — Brendan Golledge
No, the randomness is NOT judged AFTER the toss. The randomness is included in HOW the chooser chooses to toss the die. You are focusing on the wrong timeframe in general. The various vagaries of choice in something as powerfully empowered as a human being is quite relevant. For example, it would be a miracle human, but not impossible, who could FEEL the divots in a die representing the pips well enough to know how the pips on the die were situated in their own closed hand. Then they need only develop a very controlled throw in roughly the same wind conditions and against similar bouncy surfaces and voila! they can 'control' chance and determine the results of the throw of the die.and if quantum mechanics didn't make a difference, then in theory, it would all be determined. This is the same way that a die is technically determined if you do the physics equations to predict how it will fall. — Brendan Golledge
1. Everything in nature is either determined or random
2. Free will is neither determined nor random
C. Free will does not exist.
So discussions such as this are often veiled theology. — Banno
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