Didn't say it was. — frank
No, but I'm surprised that you don't. The argument you present is similar to what's known as the Clockmaker argument. It's a rationalist argument for God. — frank
Completely. It applies to any cogent process.you'd agree that what you've said of science applies equally to making a shopping list. — frank
Reason, and its effectiveness. Reason as a force in this world.Or is it reason? — frank
I dont know much about Spinoza. I think a key to understanding Schopenhauer is to see identity as fluid. You can identify with Cause. — frank
Spinoza is right on that train of thought: determinist in a rational way, that is to say in a way that allows for reason to exist and to work.This is in the vicinity of Schopenhauer — frank
But there are still causes that result in mutations and malapropisms. They aren't random. They only appear that way because of our ignorance. — Harry Hindu
As I've said a few times, if we ever devise a test to discern whether QM is Copenhagen-like or MWI-like that is inconsistent with the latter, I would consider fundamental determinism falsified — Kenosha Kid
Which opens the question of "fair" with respect to the rules, or fair under some extended notion of fairness? — tim wood
Indeed. I propose that malapropisms are the random mutations of human languages. DNA too is a language, though a chemical one, and what I find interesting is how replication error (mutations) can be a strength in that they introduce novelty.Creating new theories...
Novelty.
That's what's left sorely unaccounted for. The attribution of meaning to that which is not already meaningful. — creativesoul
if two brains can be said to be physically identical then it doesn't get more identical than conjoined twins — TheMadFool
irie, mon :fire: — 180 Proof
I am sympathetic to the broad thrust of your argument but find this particular premise a bit shaky.I also explained that the differences are irrelevant to brain function. — TheMadFool
That's why I get so cross when people want to take that argument away on the purely ideological grounds that they feel more comfortable about the idea of free-will. It's fine on a random internet forum, but in the real world such nonsense actually threatens years of progress dealing with the mentally ill and socially deprived defendants. — Isaac
Meaning is not a thing, huh? I guess it's a nothing then, which is true in the specific case of people who make a lot of noise with their mouth to say nothing.What is at fault is the explanation of communication in terms of reified meaning. — Banno
In essence, the two brains of conjoined twins are identical — TheMadFool
I imagine that if I had to share limbs with my brother, we would have fought even more than we did. There's a competitive element in people's relations, which has to be taken into account. Some twins want to differentiate themselves from their brother/sister.These twins, because they're stuck to each other, share the same experiences — TheMadFool
And hence communication is impossible... :joke:But of course there is not one thing that is what was actually meant, and which is shared by multiple folk. — Banno
Yes, there could be many purposes to philosophy, as also pointed by Mo.Then again, I didn't really answer the question of the OP of 'what is the purpose of philosophy', but rather addressed 'what is a purpose of philosophy'. — Mayor of Simpleton
Yes, and that is the key take away message for me: whether one adopts a determinist or an indeterminist outlook doesn't change the problem of freedom that much.But he argues that indeterminism is no better than determinism in this respect — SophistiCat
Rome's republican institutions have left an enduring legacy, influencing the Italian city-state republics of the medieval period, as well as the early United States and other modern democratic republics. — Gus Lamarch
I don't see a logical issue there. — Isaac
either mental states do not constrain our free choice at all (which means no one has any diminished responsibility), or mental states do constrain our free choice, — Isaac
there's no logical problem with those constraints being absolute. — Isaac
I've not heard this definition anywhere — Isaac
That is, for a given state at T0, more than one future state of the system is possible — Echarmion
I don't think this is a proven fact. Pretty large molecules have been found to display wave-particle duality, for instance. This said, I personally doubt the explication for "the hard problem" is as simple as quantic physics. There's a lot more we don't know in there.The neurological basis of decision-making, for example, which started this discussion, needs, under indeterministic interpretations, some mechanism whereby physical action is brought about without physical causation. QM is often invoked as the mechanism, but so far resolves to classical mechanics at a cellular scale, so cannot account for it. — Isaac
Determinism is the theory that every event is the result it's causes, — Isaac
