No, I'm saying that they're exactly the same argument. Which they are. X causes Y, therefore X is Y. It's stupid.
— Bartricks
A knife is a viable murder weapon. Brain functioning is a viable explanation of mind.
A banana is not a viable murder weapon. Alcohol, apparently just being alcohol, is not a viable explanation of mind. — InPitzotl
1. Alcohol causes mind event
2 Therefore alcohol is mind
1. Brain causes mind event
2. therefore brain is mind
— Bartricks
Again, you're just nay-saying. — InPitzotl
That's irrelevant. It doesn't logically follow. — InPitzotl
I don't buy that the argument is stupid. You're just nay-saying it. Let's look at why it's allegedly stupid:
Alcohol causes brain event, which causes mental event. Therefore mind is brain. It just so obviously doesn't follow I have trouble understanding how anyone can think it does.
— Bartricks
Well, it doesn't follow. But that doesn't imply it's stupid to conclude it. — InPitzotl
I see something outside my window that looks like my car parked in my driveway. It doesn't logically follow that my car is parked in my driveway; but that's still a good reason to believe my car is parked in my driveway. — InPitzotl
Anyways, you seem incapable of responding to or even recognizing critiques of your position so I won't waste any more time trying to help you. Furthermore, you’re dishonest, so there is really no use. (Ohhhh boy here comes the dunning kruger :roll: ) — khaled
But to you, it is definitional that if an object is sensible it has infinite parts. — khaled
And I noticed you dropped the objection to the 4th premise of the 4rd argument (that if you are a sensible object everything you do traces to external causes). You would rather avoid responding to an argument than admit you have no response. Dishonest and pathetic. — khaled
Only after they have become autonomous (to some degree) can they be held responsible for their actions. — Pierre-Normand
But when we blame people, we are blaming them for their choices, and for the characters that they have displayed through making those choices, when they already were in possession of some powers of rational agency. We are not blaming them for their having had flawed characters when they first became rational agents. — Pierre-Normand
1. No one has power over the facts of the past and the laws of nature.
2. No one has power over the fact that the facts of the past and the laws of nature entail every fact of the future (i.e., determinism is true).
3. Therefore, no one has power over the facts of the future. — ToothyMaw
I don't really care. — ToothyMaw
I mean maybe you are forgetting, but my position originally was that we have no basis for the concept of moral responsibility. It is enough for me to show that we don't have aseity according to you. — ToothyMaw
No, free will requires power over the facts of the future; you would need to have magical abilities to be able to alter the facts of the past in the present, which is what — ToothyMaw
1. No one has power over the facts of the past and the laws of nature.
2. No one has power over the fact that the facts of the past and the laws of nature entail every fact of the future (i.e., determinism is true).
3. Therefore, no one has power over the facts of the future.
1. We have free will only if we have power over the facts of the future.
2. No one has power over the facts of the future.
3. Therefore, we do not have free will. — ToothyMaw
1. No one has power over the facts of the past and the laws of nature.
2. No one has power over the fact that the facts of the past and the laws of nature entail every fact of the future (i.e., determinism is true).
3. Therefore, no one has power over the facts of the future.
1. We have free will only if we have power over the facts of the future.
2. No one has power over the facts of the future.
3. Therefore, we do not have free will. — ToothyMaw
So I assumed that you took your scepticism about 7 to bear on the credibility of the preceding argument. Which it doesn't.But I want some confirmation before moving forward. — ToothyMaw
I think a thick embodied view of human agency doesn't comport well with the idea that past facts about you, your own body, character, cognitive abilities and dispositions, etc., all constitute 'external causes' of your actions just because they lay in your past. On closer analysis, the idea seems nonsensical. — Pierre-Normand
My reply is that you don't account for the effect of other's free choices, something that follows from assuming free will to support your premise:
1. If we have free will, we exist with aseity.
— ToothyMaw
Can we establish if this is the case? It seems as if you accept it here:
if 2 is granted, then one accepts that if one is not morally responsible for that which caused one's initial character, then one's non-responsibility for the cause transfers to the effect. If one grants that - and that certainly seems self-evidently true to my reason - then surely one must accept it when more causes for which one is not responsible are added?
— Bartricks
But I want some confirmation before moving forward. — ToothyMaw
Although I have not assumed that a sensible object must have all the sensible properties, it must have at least one (else in what possible sense is it 'sensible'?).
— Bartricks
Quantum wave functions, electrons, and many other things in the physics of small things have no sensible properties (color, smell, taste, shape). Yet we call them physical. Unless you want to distinguish between physical and sensible now, and claim something like "electrons are not sensible objects" — khaled
You claim that there is thought to be a problem accommodating consciousness within a naturalistic worldview, I reply that most people don't think there is such a problem, then you reply that you don't think there is just a problem? If you didn't think there was such a problem why would you point out that there are people who do. What kind of argument is that? — khaled
Nor did I. Nor is that required for what I said. You just missed the point. — khaled
It's open to debate whether sensible objects are extended, or exist as subjective states.
— Bartricks
False dichotomy. They can not be extended and also not be subjective states. See: Quantum wave function. Or even electron. — khaled
But then it would also be a shit example as it would provide no evidence against anything I am arguing.
— Bartricks
It goes against premise 2 of argument 8. There are sensible objects that are not divisible. So it is not true that if a sensible object exists that it is infinitely divisible. Is it clear enough for you now? — khaled
If you accept that the mind is the content, and consequence of the functioning of the brain, then what you're saying is trivial. But if you're saying that the mind exists independently of the brain - as you seem to be saying, then you're wrong, because of the effects of alcohol on the mind. — counterpunch
I do not believe there is a single good argument for the proposition that our minds are our brains. By all means prove me wrong, but note that this:
Premise: Brain events cause mental events
Conclusion: Therefore mental events are brain events
is a stupid argument. The conclusion doesn't follow (obviously). If you add this premise - If A causes B, then A is B - then the conclusion will follow. But that premise is clearly false. — Bartricks
I meant mind. Stop nitpicking. — khaled
What sensible property do electrons have? Or photons of light? Or quantum wave functions? — khaled
A sizeable population of the people IN the philosophy departments would agree that there is no such problem. Dennett for one. — khaled
False. Whether minds are lumps of something sensible is what is in dispute. We can both agree lumps of ham don't have minds. — khaled
It makes sense to wonder how heavy a piece of paper is, but not how heavy light is. Even though both are sensible objects. In the same way, minds can be sensible, and also be such that it makes sense to wonder what they think, but not what rocks think. — khaled
I could claim that nothing is harmful at t1 (moment of death, which is premise 2).
— khaled
Yes, you could couldn't you.
— Bartricks
Yes I could. And with as much evidence and credibility as you use for your argument: None. — khaled
We were talking about sensible objects. Not extended objects. So there ends your line of reasoning. To say "extended object" is to already assume it's divisible. — khaled
No, I'm saying there could be things that are metaphysically impossible to divide. An electron is a good candidate. — khaled
Describe to me what you're imagining then. — khaled
Of course it's valid, but you are being a slippery eel, drawing attention away from the flaw in your argument by demanding I accept its logical validity — ToothyMaw
There seems to be a confusion of "product of the laws of nature" and what I mean by "bound by the laws of nature". — ToothyMaw
I don't need to deny a premise but rather carry out your argument to its conclusion: the conclusion is that we we have aseity and are not bound by the laws of nature. — ToothyMaw
