If we can throw it by the wayside when it doesn't suit us, why have it in the first place? — Echarmion
But what is your proof that what you are seeing, and going through in your life is not a long vivid dream or some realistic illusion or hallucination? — Corvus
huge numbers of universes popping into existence all the time is a huge violation of Occam's Razor. Why don't the people who believe in the MWI just believe in idealism instead? — RogueAI
To see what other folks think about this issue, I have opened this thread asking what is your reason to believe in the world, when you are not receiving it? — Corvus
What if a demon crept after you into your loneliest loneliness some day or night, and said to you: "This life, as you live it at present, and have lived it, you must live it once more, and also innumerable times; and there will be nothing new in it, but every pain and every joy... — Vaskane
E.g when probability theory is interpreted as saying that a dart must land somewhere on an infinitely divisible dart-board, at a location that has probability 0. One the one hand, we want Pr(1) to mean surely, and Pr(0) to mean never, but this 'exacting' demand conflicts with our other demand that it is possible to choose any member of an infinite set. — sime
The people of Gaza did not try to get rid of Hamas — schopenhauer1
As I understand it, such a teleological process is directed by divine Will — Gnomon
To be sure, QFT has been made to fit with smallism — Count Timothy von Icarus
In physics, the success of QFT, and the ideal of fields (wholes) being fundemental, not part(icles)s, and the rise of pancomputationalism both seem to have hit smallism quite hard. — Count Timothy von Icarus
all macroscopic phenomena are the direct consequence of microscopic phenomena — flannel jesus
That seems plausible to me. But even if some sort of substance dualism were the case, it would still seem to me that what determines our choices must exist before we choose in order for our choices to be truly "ours." So, even if I entertain the idea of "nonphysical souls," compatibalism seems more right. — Count Timothy von Icarus
and it does not require that we are free to do other than we did. — Metaphysician Undercover
We do know that if someone could take detailed knowledge of the antecedent state and correctly predict the resultant state (the decision) 100% of the time, most, including myself would take that as proof of Determinism and a refutation of the concept of Free Will. — LuckyR
It might have been better if I had never used the term. What is of underlying importance to compatibilism in my view, isn't the existence of retro-causation (whatever it is supposed to mean), but the treatment of material implication as being symmetric, i.e. of the form A <--> B, which can be interpreted in a number of ways, including Bertrand Russell's directionless "no causality" view, super-determinism and circular causality. In these cases, it is accepted that there exists synchronisation between a so-called "cause" and a so-called "effect", but where the control between "cause" and "effect" is either considered to be bidirectional, directional but a matter of perspective, or directionless in both directions. — sime
I’m surprised there are still some adults in the system, to be honest. — NOS4A2
I'm sorry I should have been more precise, I mean why do the arguments for moral nihilism conclude that there are no moral truths? Because the best arguments for moral nihilism don't seem to point to no moral truths. — Lexa
Models of causality that are "compatibilist" are those which appear to be retro-causal due to rejecting the antecedent-precedent distinction. — sime