Well, I mean I don't know if science has any views per se. People doing science have views, often very different views it seems to me. — Manuel
But our best science at the moment seems to imply that our universe is probabilistic and not determined.
Dennett believes in free will as well. I'm not seeing the problem with truth here. — Manuel
Science can make accurate predictions about the world, unlike a shaman. — emancipate
The underlying source of consciousness seems to me to be mysterious, or awesome, whether we call it God or refer to it in any other terminology. I am just surprised that some people don't see this as a mystery, or mysterious at all. — Jack Cummins
2k
I have been reading, 'The Holographic Universe,' by Michael Talbot (1991). In this, the author describes a holographic model arising within the new physics. — Jack Cummins
All determinism can say in both cases is that they were determined to say this due to some prior cause. And to say that the cause was some enlightening rational argument is not understanding determinism. So the very arguments to support determinism are undermined by the very idea of determinism since it is an idea that is arational by nature. — Richard B
yes, I agree we all make are own choices. But I think some people are heavily influenced by others and don’t necessarily have complete freedom of will due to their environment. — Charlotte Thomas-Rowe
Everyone views life differently due to whatever circumstances they are in or have experienced and nobody has the same experiences. — Charlotte Thomas-Rowe
how would you define free will? — Charlotte Thomas-Rowe
Free will is the ability to choose between different possible courses of action unimpeded. — Charlotte Thomas-Rowe
You, for instance, seem entirely ignorant of the fact that materialism was refuted by philosophers thousands of years ago. — Bartricks
'there's no materiality, as everything is made of tiny bananas, not tiny apples'. — Bartricks
Why do that for human beings? This seems rather selective and intentional on our part. — simeonz
Well, then you understand why I don't consider it the opposite of determinism. It still has predictive utility. And consequently it makes certain processes very reliable, whether they can be completely determined or not. So, I doubt that free will can rest on that. Or that we can claim that the prediction-based model of the world is just a fairy tale. — simeonz
I realize that. There is also the extended mind hypothesis. But I still claim that resting free will on non-determinism via QM implies that the standard deviation to the brain process outcome caused through quantum interactions is significant. — simeonz
If non-determinism at the scale of the brain function is negligible, this will be pertinent to those views that rest freedom on non-determinism. In the same way in which apparent Newtonian determinism is pertinent to a bridge engineer or a plane manufacturer. — simeonz
What I was arguing initially is, that this doesn't make sense for the free will argument, because the neural processes are too macroscopic to be qualitatively determined by this non-determinism. — simeonz
I agree. However, for better or worse the term Scientific Law is in general use. The overview in the Wikipedia article does a pretty good job of clarifying the situation, but it is easy to mix up "natural law" and "scientific law". — EricH
Quantum uncertainty is not arbitrary non-determinism. It just changes deterministic induction with statistical induction, but it is not the same as lack of any predictive utility. — simeonz
The development of the sciences suggest that the universe follows a set of natural laws — InPitzotl
However, inductive inference is retroactively confirmable. What I mean by that claim is that our expectation for regularity of the natural law in the distant past can be evaluated in terms of the recent past. — simeonz
It seems very important to you to make sure people realize that everything here is just a story. — InPitzotl
It's not just the philosophers. :sad:
History of quantum physics is full of misleading thought-experiment expressions that historians decided to keep on in describing various aspects of QM which ends up confusing laymen - e.g. Einstein's Does moon not exist if we don't look at it? Spooky action at a distance, Schrodinger's cat dead and alive at the same time. Neumann-Wigner interpretation of observer induced reality, so on and so forth. — hume
No one denies this. Responsible scientists do not. The best answer to the question of abiogenesis is we don't yet know how it happened. But filling the hole with a fantasy because don't yet have an answer is not cool either. I recently spoke to some people who are certain life on earth was manufactured by aliens. — Tom Storm