Forgive me, but I have trouble with the “ability to do otherwise” principle of free will. Many have taken it as a priori while I can hardly wrap my head around it. What matters to me, and responsibility in general, is whether he was the source of his actions. Thanks for clarifying. — NOS4A2
You haven't described anything impossible.
You have said that to choose one must select from options. But then you have mistakenly supposed that one needs to have chosen the options.
No, at most you need options. You do not need to have chosen the options.
I have option a and option b. I didn't choose those options, but that doesn't mean I didn't choose a over b when I select a over b. — Bartricks
Can we choose how much insulin our pancreas secretes? If not, does this rule out free will?
The brain does what the brain does in the same manner that the pancreas does what the pancreas does. Neither is under our direct control. That fact says nothing about free will. — T Clark
And yet we choose!
Consider the two wolves within, Stoicism, and Cognitive Behaviour Therapy...
Hence Paul's argument is flawed. Mind is recursive, not linear, conflicted, not homogenous. We have the capacity to choose what thoughts we revisit, which thoughts we act on, and what becomes habitual. Hence we can improve who we are.
Curious, that so many folk here think themselves automata.
14m — Banno
It does not mean that you do them un-freely either. The action is generated without cause or input from anything else in the universe. There is no restraint or anything barring such actions from being committed. It is not “determined” by any other being. So how is it not free? — NOS4A2
It doesn’t. To rule out the possibility of free will one will have to show that thoughts, or any action for that matter, comes from somewhere or someone else. — NOS4A2
As topics go, whether or not we have "free will" might be unanswerable. — Bitter Crank
A lot of our mental activity goes on outside of the portion that we are consciously aware of. What the brain delivers to our consciousness if pretty much fait accompli. We don't decide what we like, what we want, or what we think. Do you like strawberries? If so, did you decide to like strawberries, or did you just find them delicious?
For instance, I may have consciously decided that your topic title was interesting, but I'm not sure about that. Perhaps an unconscious predisposition compelled me to respond to you. I did not "decide" how to compose this response. It just arrived in my fingers on the keyboard. I have, however, edited what occurred to me. Was the editing an act of free will or was it the product of a fussy compulsion? Don't know. — Bitter Crank
It doesn't matter, really. Whether we free will or not, we have evolved to operate more or less successfully. We are, fortunately, not left to our devices. We require years of careful rearing before we are able to live independently. A lot of who and what we are is supplied by genes and experience before we have a choice in the matter. — Bitter Crank
How is that different from plain old, vanilla determinism? — T Clark
I don't understand why this would be true. I don't see why either philosophical option couldn't be consistent with determinism. — T Clark
On the other hand, I did think of a potential philosophical effect - If necessitarianism were true, then the fine-tuning argument for God would never arise. — T Clark
To me, that means it is a metaphysical question. I won't inflict my oft preached sermon on metaphysical entities here. — T Clark
I think there would have to be proof that separates some fundamental laws from their derivatives for contingentarianism to work. We can only meaningfully speak about things in existence so I think that dictates everything. — Shwah
No, not on that basis because, if for no other reason, both positions posit only a single entity / principle. — 180 Proof
1) Are there any physical consequences if necessitarianism is correct and contingentarianism is not? — T Clark
2) Is there any way to determine whether necessitarianism is true and contingentarianism is not? — T Clark
3) Are there any philosophical consequences if necessitarianism is correct and contingentarianism is not? — T Clark
I'm no expert here but it seems to me Kastrup - who is a very articulate communicator and does a great road show - is essentially riffing off Schopenhauer's idealism and updating it. K argues that humans are dissociated alters of cosmic consciousness and matter is what consciousness looks like when viewed from a certain perspective. Mind is all that exists. Importantly, like Schopenhauer, K argues that cosmic consciousness (Will) does not have a plan for existence, it is instinctive, does not communicate and is not a god surrogate. Much of Kastrup's model involves demonstrating how materialism is incoherent. — Tom Storm
Other than creating a flurry of rebuttals or anxieties in the so called scientific physicalist community, what does the model give us? Does Kastrup straw man naturalism by reducing it to materialism? He's clearly benefiting enormously from the current gaps in the understanding of consciousness and quantum physics. — Tom Storm
Elaborate on this. How do you know that the past does not extend infinitely in the same way that the future does? — _db
There is no evidence to suggest that post-expiration existence is a thing. From a philosophical perspective, that's pretty much all that matters as far as conclusions are concerned. — Garrett Travers
Both the body and thus all states of the body dissolves upon death. — NOS4A2
I can go along with attributing a form of DID to everyone.
But not to nature. We don't know if nature is intrinsically like or unlike experience, so it seems to me to anthropomorphize nature in the extreme, to speak of objects as "alters". — Manuel
And yet the two definitions you gave are different. — Janus
Aren't we aware of things, other entities, events and environments rather than "the universe/ reality". I think we conceive of the latter, but are not aware of it, meaning that they are ideas, not experiences or percepts. — Janus
So are qualia "individual instances of subjective, conscious experience" or ."individual instances of what it is like to have sensations, perceptions, and thoughts"? Is there a difference? — Janus
Doesn't "what it is like to be aware" really just mean "what it is to be aware", in the sense of "how does it feel to be aware", since the idea of comparison is inapt in this context. And does how it feels to be aware of something differ from the apprehension of the qualities of wnatever it is we are aware of? — Janus
His is a very interesting case. He makes some good points, I mean, it is true that in terms of acquaintance, we are best acquainted with experience than anything we study in nature.
However, it seems to me that if consciousness were as fundamental as he says, we should be able to introspect and know everything about the world. And there's lots of things to say about unconscious brain processes which are far more prevalent than mental states. — Manuel
It leaves the status of experience exactly as it was, "metaphysically neutral", as it were. — Manuel
No, I mean, I personally don't have too much issues with "qualia", but it seems to me *some* people here start arguing about the term, which I don't see the point of.
So I speak of seeing outside your window, listening to music or tasting chocolate. If people have trouble with that, then we aren't going to have much of a conversation. — Manuel
Sure. That makes sense. It's assumed to be the case, because what other option exists? — Manuel
I think it's a kind of massive epistemic gap. We can say some things about the human body as well as physics, we can say some things about the brain as a biological organ.
But the difference between looking at neuronal activity in a person and actually having the taste of chocolate or listening to you favorite tune, etc. is just enormous. We lack intelligence to know how this is possible. — Manuel
Most problems in understanding the world are "hard problems". — Manuel
Anyone can use whatever vocabulary they see fit, I'm thinking qualia here is just a very loaded word. We all have experience, we can see outside our window and see a blue sky, or a green tree or a person walking around.
We can listen to music, etc. No problem with that. — Manuel
We know way too little about the brain to think about how the brain interprets a stimulation as an ordinary object.
We have problems with the behavior of particles, much simpler than a brain. So, it's not surprise we can't say much about something as complex as seeing another person or looking at the sky, etc. — Manuel
To what degree can we really be said to know what we mean by 'qualia'? — ajar
The argument (the title of the OP) rests on the presupposition that time had no beginning. — Shawn
If time existed in nothingness, and there was a possibility of the big bang, then it becomes necessarily so that something came out from nothing. — Shawn
Imagine now the first thought you ever had (I'm about 99% certain that you won't recall it), itself initiated by factors beyond your control, set the ball rolling and you are what you are (thought-wise) because of that first thought! — TheMadFool
I think this is the problem, and it’s even in the language you’ve used: our thoughts might be given to us, but our “deliberate actions” come from us. We have a thought to do one thing and a thought to do another; options and a choice. — AJJ
That's certainly what critics of religion argue - that it provides an anodyne for suffering. — Tom Storm
I suspect however that a transcendent meaning will only serve to magnify feelings of cosmic injustice and misery - how to explain the death of babies and childhood cancer and the unbelievable savage cruelty of nature... If all is just physicalism then, so what? But if it was designed this way by a transcendent being or force, then what a staggeringly wasteful and vile approach to being this is. Of course believers can always cobble together justifications or escape clauses. — Tom Storm
I wonder if life would be any less tedious or fraught if idealism holds true. What do you suppose is the advantage of transcendent meaning? — Tom Storm
physicalism is reconcilable with idealism if consciousness exists, insofar as idealism is falsified, but not reconcilable if consciousness does not physically exist but is nonetheless real, insofar as idealism is obtained.
Physicalism is reconcilable with idealism if the entire field of consciousness is existentially physical, the possibility of abstract field content, is falsified. — Mww
Well, like any other "physical field", do you have a candidate for a "force carrier", or gauge boson, for fundamental interactions (e.g. EM field has photons)? Or does this "physical field of consciousness" operate in a non-physical manner not subject to known physical laws (re: fundamental forces)? — 180 Proof
Some things are physical AND some things are nonphysical. There, reconciled. — TheMadFool
Generally underlying a question like this is an attempt to locate some kind of transcendent meaning that perhaps can't be found in physicalism (however we define this latter term). Is this where you are heading? — Tom Storm