This continues to be the case. But it does not mean that science is atheistic; rather, that science is agnostic.
— Herg
Wikipedia/atheism describes atheism to broadly mean lack of belief in deities. It's only when you get to the narrow definition where there is a positive claim about deities' inexistence.
The OP concerns the broad definition of atheism, and as science grew, it had long assumed or ignored belief in deities. — VoidDetector
The Argument from the Scientific Test of Reality
1. If science cannot verify the existence of X, then the best evidence tells us that X does not exist.
2. Science cannot verify the existence of objective moral values.
3. Therefore, the best evidence tells us that objective moral values do not exist. — vulcanlogician
But you have changed 'weather' to 'day' here, and so you're attacking a straw man.The "it" in "it is raining" cannot syntactically refer to the weather in the trivial way the "it" does in "it is sunny" because the syntax differs. This is made obvious when you consider that "a sunny day" is a correct form but "a raining day" isn't. The day can be "sunny" but the day cannot be "raining". Rather, it can be rainy. — Baden
To me this seems rather less straightforward than the view that "it" in "it is raining" refers to something. I suggest that what has actually happened here is that what it refers to (the weather) is no longer overtly mentioned because it is almost always the weather, and nothing else, that is raining, and so there's usually no need to mention the weather explicitly.the most straightforward and commonly accepted logical analysis of the former is the non-indexical dummy pronoun angle, — Baden
A: What's the bumble bee doing?
B: It's raining.
So "it" refers to the bumble bee.
The conversation makes no sense, but the syntactic connection is sound. In your conversation "it" refers to the weather; in mine to the bumble bee. But it's a question of syntax, not semantics.
Does it matter that your conversation makes sense and mine doesn't, for determining reference? — Dawnstorm
I didnt mean hallucinations, I meant that you arent getting sensory data in the tank, and was interested in how you think that might contrast or factor in with your view here — DingoJones
I assume you're talking about hallucinations. According to Wikipedia, "the hallucinations are caused by the brain misidentifying the source of what it is currently experiencing, a phenomenon called faulty source monitoring." (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sensory_deprivation)What about when you are awake and in a sensory deprivation tank? Would you say that is the same as dreaming (as far as where your brain is being fed from, memory or “current sensory input)? — DingoJones
I would agree with this. The difference between dream sleep and full consciousness is not that consciousness itself is different, but that what we are conscious of is different, because the brain is feeding consciousness with stuff mainly from stored memories instead of mainly from current sensory input.In my view we're conscious of dreams if we're dreaming. — Terrapin Station
The problem is that if all you can say about X is that it is not Y, you are attributing only a negative property to X, and nothing real can have only negative properties.Your phrase 'something other than "time"' is empty of meaning, unless you can suggest some of the properties of this supposed 'something'.
— Herg
I do not agree with this. To say "X is something other than Y" is not to say something devoid of meaning, as it distinguishes X from Y. I agree that it says very little about what X is, but it may be considered as a start, and therefore not devoid of meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think Occam's razor applies here, because it only applies where you are seeking an explanation for how things are, and that is not the case here.Why can't the fact that there is something rather than nothing simply be a brute fact?
— Herg
Because 'Something' is so non-Occam's razor; the simplest model is 'Nothing' and with that model, nothing requires explanation. — Devans99
This sounds tongue in cheek, but in case it isn't, I will point out that the stars and planets weren't available for God to use as a means when initiating the Big Bang.A deity no doubt had the motive, and may arguably have had the opportunity, but what was the means?
— Herg
I am a fan of the explanation that the universe is merely a giant game of Conway's Game of Life which God initiated through the big bang. The stars provide the energy for life and the planets provide the living surfaces. — Devans99
If you can't buy the Maserati, what sense does it make to say that you are choosing it? You must be choosing it for something, or you can't truthfully be said to be choosing it at all. 'I choose the Maserati, but not for anything in particular,' doesn't make sense. In the context of our discussion, choosing L1 means choosing L1 in order to execute L1, and the presumption is that you have the power to execute L1, because if you don't, you cannot truthfully be said to be choosing L1 at all.I used the words "we are free to choose either L1 or L2." You used the words "L1 and L2 are equally in our power." Your words and mine mean exactly the same.
— Herg
No, they mean something quite different. I can choose a Maserati over a Fiat, but that does not mean it is in my power to buy a Maserati. — Dfpolis
We agree that it seems that executing L1 rather than L2 is in your power; the burden of proof is on you, not on me, to prove that both L1 and L2 actually are in your power. As for 'unargued', what do you imagine I have been doing since we started this conversation?The relevant point is not what seems to be true, but your unargued claim that it only seems to be true. — Dfpolis
What an odd argument. Science is able to make reliable predictions precisely because, in cases such as the vinegar and baking soda case, there is no free will; the vinegar and the baking soda, when mixed together, have to make carbon dioxide because they have no choice in the matter. That is how we know that making carbon dioxide in such a situation is possible. So what would be the parallel situation when you are contemplating whether to stay at home or go to the store? It would have to be that we can only predict that you will go to the store, and therefore know that going to the store is possible for you, if you, like the vinegar and the baking soda, have no free will. So your parallel with science is apposite only if you take my side of the argument and hold that humans, like vinegar and baking soda, have no free will.So, the question is: how do we know what is possible? There are two ways. First, whatever actually happens must be possible, or it could not happen. The second way is knowledge by analogy, which is how science makes its predictions. For example, in previous cases, mixing vinegar and baking soda has produced carbon dioxide. Even though the present case differs slightly from previous cases, I know, by analogy that, if I have vinegar and baking soda I have the potential to produce carbon dioxide. I know this for a fact, whether or not I actually mix them to produce carbon dioxide.
So, you can choose to say that we only "seem" to have potentials that are not actualised, but in doing so, you reject the structure of science, and specifically, its ability to make reliable predictions. — Dfpolis
I rather thought you might say this, but of course I did not want to presume that you would, because no philosopher should ever put words into another philosopher's mouth.What feature(s) of your past experience do you believe give you this knowledge? I don't believe there are any such features.
— Herg
The fact that I have gone to the store and stayed at home previously, and have not suffered any relevant disability since. — Dfpolis
I do maintain that what applies to mixing vinegar and baking soda also applies to humans, in that given a certain potential for human action, it is simply a matter of physical law whether the potential is actualised.But, that has been established by previous analogous cases. There is no question begging, as I have shown how we know unrealised potentials, and that schema applies here. The ball is in your court to show why it applies to mixing vinegar and baking soda, but not to going to the store. — Dfpolis
Since this directly contradicts everything I have ever read about quantum physics, I have no comment to make, and I shall not raise quantum physics with you in the future.Actually, quantum theory says that all unobserved physical processes are fully deterministic. Unpredictability enters only when quantum systems are observed. — Dfpolis
This appears to be compatibilism, and if that is your position, then we have been arguing at cross purposes. I am not a compatibilist. My understanding of free will is that it requires the ability to do otherwise than one actually does.We are free if we are not constrained. We are constrained when we want to do A, but are prevented. This happens many times, so we know how to recognise constraints when we see them. For example, yesterday I wanted to go 70mph or more on the I-15, but traffic constrained me from going more than 0-20 mph. When I decide whether or not to go to the store, I experience no such constraint. So, I am free to choose either. — Dfpolis
No, they don't know this. They believe it, but belief is not knowledge, and therefore there is nothing requiring explanation.Free will is necessary to explain the reality of moral responsibility -- which happens in the world. People know that they are responsible for actions they freely choose, — Dfpolis
This is just speculation, because you have not established grounds for believing that minds complete the determination of actions.Determinism means that choices are fully immanent in the state of the world before the agent exists. For there to be no middle ground, the Principle of Excluded Middle requires indeterminism to be the strict contradiction of determinism: that choices are not fully immanent in the state of the world before the agent exists. That differs from "mere randomness," which is mindless, for it does not consider the determining operation of the agent's mind.
So, there is a middle ground between fully determined and mindlessly random, viz. the result of mindful action on the part of a free agent. — Dfpolis
the hypothetical "if we're to go by experience", or the categorical "experience gives us good reason to believe that". Dfpolis has now said this:
— Herg
I don't agree that it's at all clear that there's a difference there. — Terrapin Station
Your phrase 'something other than "time"' is empty of meaning, unless you can suggest some of the properties of this supposed 'something'.If time is defined in relation to physical change, then it is necessary for physical change to be occurring in order for time to be passing, hence a universe is required for time, and it makes no sense to talk about anything "before" the universe. If God creates this universe, God is outside of time, and timeless. This is not incoherent, it just requires referring to something other than "time" to account for God's actions, God being non-physical and time being constrained to physical existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
Better.But if time is defined in some other way, such that time can be passing without any physical change occurring, then there is no need for a physical universe for there to be time, and talk of a time before the universe would be coherent. This allows that God's actions occur in time, therefore God is not timeless in this conception, but God's actions are at a time when there is no physical existence — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think this is correct. If it were, the proposition "something came from nothing" should contain a logical error: but if so, what is the error?There should logically be nothing. — Devans99
This is a statement about you, not about the universe (or indeed about god). Why should reality be constrained by the limits of your (or anyone's) imagination?Somehow I cannot imagine the universe in all its magnificence always existing without any involvement from god. — Devans99
Why would it?This would all depend on how one defines "time". — Metaphysician Undercover
Ah, the God of Philosophy. I believe his name is Loki, otherwise known as the Trickster...;)But for some reason the God Of Philosophy has put humans in charge — hks
Good question. He would at the very least have to change from not yet having created the universe to having created the universe, which implies that he is a god who changes; and since change requires time, a god who changes is not a timeless god. I infer that the notion of a timeless creator god is incoherent. However, a god who changes within his own time but sees all of our time at once is not incoherent. Having said which, I personally see no evidence for any kind of god.But what exactly is a timeless god, how could he do anything? — Devans99
I have come to the conclusion that we can be certain of nothing.
It appears that I'm posting on this forum.
I may not be and cannot be certain that I am. — Kranky
Conclusion: Therefore the choice between L1 and L2 was not pre-determined, and we could have chosen L2.
— Herg
I don't think he was saying this conclusion. "Experience tells us" is another way of saying "per experience," or "phenomenally, if we're to go by experience," etc.
Your conclusion is written from a perspective outside of experience per se. But the sentence is "experience tells us," The sentence isn't presented as a perspective from outside of experience. — Terrapin Station
I think this makes it clear that Dfpolis is making the categorical claim, not the hypothetical claim.I experience tells us more than this. It additionally tells us, in many cases, that L1 and L2 are equally in our power. It is equally in my power, for example, to go to the store to buy an ingredient for dinner or to stay home a while longer to discuss philosophy. I know both are equally in my power on the basis of my past experience. — Dfpolis
I used the words "we are free to choose either L1 or L2." You used the words "L1 and L2 are equally in our power." Your words and mine mean exactly the same. So in my (b) I could have written "it seems to us that L1 and L2 are equally in our power", and that would have meant the same as what I actually wrote (and would also be true).This isn't true. All that experience tells us is that:
a) approaching a choice, we are aware of more than one new line of action (let's call these lines L1 and L2)
(b) it seems to us that we are free to choose either L1 or L2
(c) after we have chosen (say) L1, it seems to us that we could have chosen L2 instead.
— Herg
I experience tells us more than this. It additionally tells us, in many cases, that L1 and L2 are equally in our power. — Dfpolis
What feature(s) of your past experience do you believe give you this knowledge? I don't believe there are any such features.It is equally in my power, for example, to go to the store to buy an ingredient for dinner or to stay home a while longer to discuss philosophy. I know both are equally in my power on the basis of my past experience.
You are not entitled to describe your state of mind as "awareness of alternatives being equally in my power" until it is established that these alternatives actually are equally in your power; and since this is precisely the issue between us, you are begging the question.This awareness of alternatives being equally in my power, and not "I could have chosen otherwise," is what I mean by free will.
This is almost certainly not true of our universe. Nature is probabilistic rather than deterministic at the quantum level, and quantum superposition means that there is usually more than one line of action leading from the present state.Purely physical systems (as opposed to physical systems with intellect and will) have only one immanent line of action -- that determined by its present state and the laws of nature.
Since, as I have just stated, our universe is almost certainly not deterministic, and there are multiple lines of action in purely physical systems, humans having multiple lines of action does not imply that humans are not purely physical systems. But even if the universe is deterministic, and purely physical systems only have one line of action leading from the present state, while humans see multiple lines of action before them, you still have not shown that we are free to choose between those multiple lines of action.Intentional systems, such as humans, are essentially different in that we can have multiple lines of actions immanent before we commit to one. The difference in the number of immanent lines of action is critical, for it means that we differ from purely physical systems. So any analogy to their deterministic nature fails.
Your premise 1 begs the question by describing our state of mind as "we are aware that...", as I have already noted.My argument is:
1. Approaching the choice, we are aware that incompatible lines of action, L1, L2, ..., are equally in our power.
2. To have free will means that we have incompatible lines of action equally in our power.
3. Therefore, we have free will.
You could deny premise 1, but only dogmatically. — Dfpolis
The sense of "in my power" that you use here will not deliver what you need to establish free will. What you mean here is that there are facts about the physical world - such as the gravitational attraction between your body and the earth, and the lack of any surface between the earth and moon on which you could walk - that prevent you walking to the moon, but that do not prevent you walking to the store. That sense of "in my power" is all about the limitations physical laws place upon a body like yours; it has nothing at all to do with free will.First, I know what is and what is not in my power from my experience as a human in the world. It is in my power to walk to the store it is not in my power to walk to the moon.
The truth conditions are that you should be free to choose between alternatives; but you are not entitled to say that this is a real state unless we have established that those truth conditions obtain, and since this is precisely the issue between us, you are once again begging the question.Second, being in my power is a real state, with well-defined truth conditions.
Of course. But you cannot validly infer from this that staying home was in your power before you set off to the store.Staying home ceases to be in my power once I am on my way to the store.
Why does beauty give us pleasure? — Purple Pond
As Strawson admits before giving his argument, experience tells us that being a free agent is part of "the way we are." To be a free agent is to be the radical source of new lines of action, where "radical source" means that the new line of action is not fully immanent (pre-determined) before the agent chooses. — Dfpolis
I'm sitting watching a sunset.
I think "wow this is pretty"
I then remember I cannot be certain I'm actually watching this beautiful sunset, as it may not even be happening.
How could I then continue to enjoy it? — Kranky
In short, your 'reality' is just the virtual entities that are economical. And that also suggests (seems to me) some kind of Platonism. — macrosoft
AFIK, numbers are just part of human cognition. They aren't 'out there.' — macrosoft
My gripe is that we don't have a non-controversial grasp on what numbers even are. — macrosoft
And perhaps you should prove why you disagree with Aristotle on The Prime Mover and with Aquinas on The First Cause etc.! — hks
Recently I've been wondering if consciousness is the primary substance that the material world gloms onto or adheres to.
What are your thoughts on this and what are the implications for free will? — Noah Te Stroete
NOTA ensures your vote is not wasted. — romanv
Now you can start to see at least some of your views being reflected in the winning candidate, as they will have to adjust their platform and/or candidate to get your consent. — romanv
A voter should be guaranteed an acceptable outcome, otherwise they should choose NOTA. How can anyone give their consent to an election declaring a winner when there is a chance that they wont get adequate representation? — romanv
Supposing the level of NOTA remains very high, then it makes a compelling case for voter led electoral reform, the most likely result is a PR system. — romanv
Who decided that pain is something to avoid? — bizso09
Because if it had been like that, it wouldn't have conferred an evolutionary advantage.Why can't the feeling of pain be neutral or maybe something to seek?
yeah, so now we're back to evolution, which is back to big bang and God. See my original post. — bizso09
The irony in Herg's anti-idealism is that s/he takes a model (the idea of hydrogen) for the thing itself. — macrosoft
Primatologists Jane Goodall and Frans de Waal both stated that the child was at risk of being killed, if only because the gorilla was so immensely strong. There was, in their opinion (which is more to be trusted than any of ours) an imminent threat.
— Herg
That is their opinion, not conclusive evidence or indication. — Happiness
But without this moral obligation to specieshood, the killing of Harambe would be outrageously wrong, because the killing was done preemptively before any conclusive imminent threat. There was no conclusive evidence or indication that Harambe posed an imminent threat to the boy, and so the killing of Harambe is unjust. — Happiness
Unanswerable, because we don't know what it is like to be a member of another species.Is it moral to value human life over another species' life?
I want to know How any kind of Neural Activity can result in the experience of the Redness of Red, for example, in the Conscious Mind. Mapping the Brain and Measuring the Neural Correlates of Consciousness for Red is the Easy Problem. I want to know the answer to the Hard Problem. That is, the Conscious experience of Redness itself.
— SteveKlinko
Why are you assuming that there's any difference? — Terrapin Station
Exactly. Again, it's a conflation of how we know about things, what we understand, etc. with what our knowing, etc. are about. — Terrapin Station
To ignore that physics is grounded in a wider context that makes it intelligible is tempting but misleading, I think. — macrosoft
I am willing to do so. I think the best way is to ask you to say something about mind-independent reality. Then I will try to point out the contradictions. — macrosoft