One photon is sufficient to cause a detectable signal and response, but without photons you'd see nothing. — jkop
Thermodynamics is not symmetrical.
Surely you don't intend to suggest that the above listed theories can simply ignore thermodynamics? — m-theory
There is no axiom of free will in qm. — m-theory
Well not all laws of physics are deterministic. — m-theory
Determinism is often an interpretation more so than a necessary conclusion.
This is especially true of the foundations of quantum theory, which are by definition probabilistic. — m-theory
How do you get from "what happens is a sensitive function of initial conditions" to "choice cannot exist"? What if the compatabilist defines "choice" in such a way that it, too, is a sensitive function of initial conditions? Then making choices can (and maybe does) occur even if determinism is the case. — Michael
Which part of receptor (eye) in combination with signal interpreter (in this case the cerebrum) did I fail to clarify? You would be just as blind if the connection of two perfectly functional eyes to the brain was severed as you would if somebody glued those eyes shut. — Barry Etheridge
And just as I'm talking about this, I see ... — Barry Etheridge
You don't see light. You respond to an electrical signal transmitted from a receptor in your eye which obviously isn't light at all. I — Barry Etheridge
They would likewise define "choice" in a manner compatible with determinism, and so argue that we do have and make choices. To argue that this isn't what a choice is doesn't make much sense unless "choice" already refers to a real thing, and that the compatabilist's description of this thing is mistaken. But, of course, that would entail that we have and make choices anyway. — Michael
As I see it, the compatibilist position is that a person 'could have done otherwise', based on an epistemological interpretation of that phrase and that, since that's the only interpretation that anybody has been able to suggest so far, that's the maximum sort of free will that anybody could imagine. — andrewk
Fallibilism (from Medieval Latin: fallibilis, "liable to err") is the philosophical principle that human beings could be wrong about their beliefs, expectations, or their understanding of the world
Cool. How is that shown? — Mongrel
If an electron is a wave, yes. — Mongrel
Neither of you offered a reason to allow some kind of possibility that is distinct from logical possibility. — Mongrel
Leibniz is dealing in logical possibility. So let's consider whether there really is any other kind of possibility. What argument would you put to Leibniz to convince him that there is? — Mongrel
I just assumed you were into the falsifiability criterion, with your talk of Popper turning in his grave. — Hoo
Yes, but my view, which I have defended in my discussion with Question, is that the theory of relativity merely is a theory about the metric of spacetime — Pierre-Normand
The thesis is that explanation of X is deduction of X from postulated necessity. Now this postulation is the creative act, the myth or element of rationalism. — Hoo
Theories (postulations of necessity that allow for the generations of implications that can be falsified) are seemingly going to be stronger and more falsifiable as they are projected across time and space. — Hoo
This "probability" seems to reduce to economy. — Hoo
"UN" stands for the "Uniformity of Nature". This is a traditional (post-Humean) label for the missing premise, though in fact it is misleading. For UN is not simply the claim that nature exhibits regularities. It is the claim that the regularities that have emerged in my experience are among the regularities that hold throughout nature. — link below
Well, that is your own assessment of the situation. While general relativity on its own may suggest (rather than logically entail) something like the block universe view, quantum mechanics rather suggests that the fundamental laws of physics are non-deterministic. There also are no-collapse interpretations of QM, such as the many-world view, that may be construed as deterministic, but that would still make the evolution of individual coherent histories, as experienced by sentient observers such as ourselves, non-deterministic. — Pierre-Normand
The article indeed seems to portray the view as being, if not contestable, at least contested. While Andreas Albrecht was defending it, Avshalom Elitzur, Lee Smolin and George Ellis were arguing strongly against it. Jennan Ismael, a philosopher rather than a physicist, was only arguing that our experience of the flow of time is consistent with the block universe view. — Pierre-Normand
OK, but will there be assumed uniformity of nature in 5 minutes? — Hoo
Something I didn't mention in the OP was the postulation of unseen entities. That's very important. But I thought I'd focus on the "projection" of necessity. Of course the assumed uniformity of nature figures into this. — Hoo
That would make no sense. For example, the first sentence is this, "Einstein once described his friend Michele Besso as 'the best sounding board in Europe' for scientific ideas." That in no way amounts to a claim that block theory is the received view. — Terrapin Station
Which statement(s) in that article to you take to imply that the block theory is the received view? — Terrapin Station
So you'd say that the block universe theory of time is indeed the received view in the sciences? — Terrapin Station
I am not sure what you mean by IDENTICAL. Is there some way in which the phenomenal qualities of colors, sounds, feelings and the private subjective worlds in which they appear are identical to the objective particles and their interactions ? — lorenzo sleakes
You're claiming that the "prevailing conception of science" is the block universe theory of time simply because the block universe theory of time is isomorphic with general relativity? — Terrapin Station
Strong causal determinism hasn't been the received view in the sciences for something like 140 years now. — Terrapin Station
It seems to me that to be self-aware is to be aware of (or to make) a distinction, self/not-self in experience. In which case, to be aware but not self-aware consists of not making that distinction, rather than not having one side or the other as experiences. — unenlightened
I'd say more that unless someone has very unusual mental phenomena, a rejection of free will is far more likely to be based on faith, since there's no good evidence that all phenomena in the world are strongly causally deterministic. — Terrapin Station
"If the universe is finite, then what's outside it? What does it expand into?"
You might be in a state of delusion, or an artificial construct in a more subtle reality etc. — Punshhh
According to current cosmological theories there cannot be such a [finite] spacetime. If it is flat it must be infinite — andrewk