There’s no reason for the will to be an illusion, even in determinism. Determinism and underterminism are both compatible with taking the mind seriously, as an agent. It’s called ‘compatibilism’. — Olivier5
I fail to see the meaning in death truly, its why I kind of disagree with Camus and Sartre on a lot of stuff, they still manage to try to fit in some sort of meaning, when I believe there would never be.This is somewhat referenced from Albert Camus “A Happy Death”. When the man was facing death, he appreciates the fact that he existed and that somewhat gave his life some meaning. — Josh Lee
you have the illusion of so,But from your (3) it also follows that you can't control your very argument, so how can you believe in it? That's exactly my problem. — Pippen
Many neurobiologists conclude from premises X, Y, Z to the conclusion that our will is unfree. But that means that their very argument is based on unfree reasoning, i.e. having no alternatives, undermining any confidence or justification in that process and therefore in the conclusion. If you have no choice what to think it's basically circular reasoning: you can just hope your one way is right, no other chance since no other way. — Pippen
being happy is the only meaning to life, but that only sounds like a way to prevent sadness and suicide. — TiredThinker
Can we properly examine life while still alive? — TiredThinker
You might find Wheeler's PAP interesting then... — 3017amen
Is there a specific reason why you wouldn’t? — Possibility
The earlier without the latter is where we wish to be, however this is impossible due to the fact that we will face suffering later on.
The latter without the earlier is what nihilism seems like, where they await the demise of their life. — Josh Lee
Hence I somewhat conclude, when you’re able to embrace death as the end to your suffering while also appreciating the fact that you’ve existed. Being able to balance these ideas is where you can rebel against the fact that “life has an ulterior meaning” while also living life as it is. — Josh Lee
That’s because it’s pure speculation. How would one even begin to test such a theory? — Possibility
the quantum-level arrangement of an integrated system in superposition. — Possibility
Done by human action using their free will — Outlander
omewhere down the line there's some guy doing what he wanted to just because. The guy who created the lottery company chose to do so? The workers chose to work in said store versus another? The shipping company founder chose to start up the company? — Outlander
Well, and I can gather the response already, say he literally flipped a coin one day and decided to either spend his last extra entertainment money either on renting a movie or buying a lottery ticket. That coin flip- and nothing else- literally determined him buying the lottery ticket. I suppose we'll say it's literally the exact amount of force used as determined by whatever circumstance determined his mood at the time of flipping... that determined precisely how many times the coin would flip and what side it would land on, yeah? — Outlander
I dunno... sure. Every cause has to have an effect. We're getting into the territory of refuting Newton's Laws of Motion at that point. But human will generally determined things again if not somewhere down the line. I think that's what we're forgetting. — Outlander
Other people's free will determines other people's choices. Agree or disagree and why?
Bonus: Thoughts on the butterfly effect concept and resulting book and later movie? — Outlander
If I understand correctly, and agree with much of it, our circumstances in which we make choices or otherwise determine what choices can be made is largely if not entirely outside of our control? — Outlander
I get that. The average person has an average job and isn't a millionaire. He cannot go on crazy vacations more than a few times a year or splurge on things like second homes, boats, Rolex watches, etc. And- even if he does "randomly" win the lottery and all that changes, you'd insist on saying it really was not random and he was simply determined or dare I say "destined" to win the lottery. Right? — Outlander
I guess the question that needs to be asked is what would you say would need to happen/what circumstances would a reality have where there is your definition of free will and how does that compare to the one we live in now? — Outlander
Socratic method! Ah,the appeal to authority. If somebody says the sky is a pink elephant I dont have to refute him. Ditto your assertions are thus. — Asif
And you dont explain how you can choose to respond further or not. Just self refuting pedantic guff.
I suppose you cant raise your hand as a demonstration
or choose to blow out candles at your birthday either.
Ludicrous. — Asif
The choices we have for breakfast are limited to what we have available and is a result of other circumstances. When we went shopping, what we bought, what we can and cannot afford or otherwise can and cannot eat or simply prefer to eat. It's not impossible to have nearly anything for breakfast, after all circumstances can and some even say- when undesirable- are meant to be changed. — Outlander
So where does that leave us as far as determinism? Who knows, a friend can stop by with McDonald's or something on a whim and that ends up being your breakfast. Everything is determined by something. What I think that determinism doesn't properly include is that everything can change. The Earth could lose it's gravity one day. Some things (circumstances or "realities") are simply less likely to change than others. — Outlander
Let me formulate this deductively,I chose my own breakfast. If your logic says no then it's not logic but dogma — Asif
do you learn anything new if your determined? Is a boxing match determined? — Asif
When folks get that blinded by their thinking that they cant identify their own will and choice then really I say you have been bewitched by false doctrine. — Asif
The examples you gave and the big bang response are just illogical. Tell me was it determined for you to get up this morning at the exact time you did? — Asif
I notice determinists cannot explain the simplest of everyday experiences. — Asif
I'm hungry right now, and have the choice to go eat.
Later I'll be tired, and will have the choice to take a nap.
If I start suffering in my mind, I have the choice to do something about that too.
We have the choice to let go of the sweeping grand philosophical claims, and get practical and real. That is, rational. And we have the choice not to do that too. — Hippyhead
No one has a choice?! Many people live without this dogmatic view of suffering and prosper. — Asif
You said a while ago that the mind does not occupy space then say it is a physical object. Which is it? — Sir2u
You have the right to believe that if that's what works for you. I'm not an evangelist. I'm not going to try to shove an alternative down your throat. Should you express a wish to discuss an alternative I'm willing, but I will respect your choice until then. — Hippyhead