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There isn't a point. Me and Chesterton are speculating as to how free will could exist naturally (i.e., without God).How can one differentiate between an instinctive reaction to one of free will. How can one do the same between coerced reaction and free will. I fail to see the point we are making here concerning free will.
On the contrary, we could exhibit free will all the time. That our options are sometimes statistically weighted doesn't mean we don't make a decision. We still choose to do this over that. I could run in front of a train, but I choose not to.Free will may be exhibited for fleeting moments but in reality it is as much controlled by social as well as other factors.
I'm not relation to either John Brown or his brotherYou may be falling from an aeroplane but it is your free will choice on whether to scream all the way down or do it silently with dignity! Either way; They will be scraping you off the runway with a bucket and a spade![]()
It could be a mixture of both. It could be that we genuinely have free will, and that it evolved for some purpose, and that peculiar quantum randomness is implemented in some very complex algorithm in the brain, and that algorithm is, effectively, 'free will'.
Exactly. That's why we should act as if we have free will: if we don't have free will, we have no choice over how we act, but if we do have free will, then we will be correct in our presumption.If we don't, then what is the point of discussing it? In fact, if we do not decide to act, then what point is there in any discussion of conscious human action? We may as well be writing essays exploring the philosophical nature of a falling rock. Curiosity may lead us to explore the physical aspects of such things, but without choice, philosophy itself is pure absurdity. But I suppose that we have no choice but to discuss it, because that is how our strings are being pulled, right?
How so? You still experience the qualia of the world, you still feel loved and cherished, etc. Even if you don't have free will, aren't they values worth enjoying?On a personal level, I'm going with Rush on this one: I will choose free will. Even if I am doing so only because that is how the giant wind-up clock of the Universe has directed me, I'm fine with that (as if I could choose not to be fine with it in such a case, ha ha). Because if there is no choice, then all the things that I find most valuable in this world - love chiefest among them - have absolutely no value whatsoever.
On the contrary, my inevitable discussion with you may trigger a causal chain that inexoriably leads to you changing your mind. Don't forget that the world isn't any different without free will: we still have debates and discussions, we still learn new beliefs and change old ones.And I refuse to live in such a world. And if you disagree with that, just know that even though you are compelled inexorably to argue against my position, there is no point in doing so since I didn't choose my position in the first place. Not that you can help knowing that, since it was inevitable.
Haha, my point was simply that a) your objection to a free-will-less universe is invalid, and b) free will could actually exist in a wholly natural, God-less universe.Alright. Work out the specifics (in layman's English) and get back to me.![]()
Exactly. That's why we should act as if we have free will: if we don't have free will, we have no choice over how we act, but if we do have free will, then we will be correct in our presumption.
We act according to natural law, yes, but the algorithms in our brain which govern our behaviour still create behaviour that looks as if the individual involved has free will. My body's behaviour writes this post, which influences your brain, which may then, via its complex algorithmic process, acts as if it has concluded that free will exists. The universe may be deterministic, but an individual's behaviour can be accurately modelled as if it had a concious mind, and free will.If we have no free will, we should not act at all; rather, we must act as directed by the Universe.
Why is there no point?That's my point. If there is no free will, there is absolutely no point to philosophy. Which is an inverted way of saying that there is absolutely no point to asking whether we have free will or not.![]()
How so? You still experience the qualia of the world, you still feel loved and cherished, etc. Even if you don't have free will, aren't they values worth enjoying?
Haha, my point was simply that a) your objection to a free-will-less universe is invalid, and b) free will could actually exist in a wholly natural, God-less universe.
Are they values worth enjoying if they aren't real? Suppose you met a woman, or a man, or a dog, who loved you and gave you all the experience of love for years. Then some scientists show up at your door one day and tell you "That thing is an android. We were just experimenting. We programmed it to demonstrate love."
Good point, and my answer to the first question is "no". Love would have no value to me whatsoever if I did not believe that those who love me choose to do so of their own volition.
If we don't, then what is the point of discussing it? In fact, if we do not decide to act, then what point is there in any discussion of conscious human action? We may as well be writing essays exploring the philosophical nature of a falling rock. Curiosity may lead us to explore the physical aspects of such things, but without choice, philosophy itself is pure absurdity. But I suppose that we have no choice but to discuss it, because that is how our strings are being pulled, right?
Good point, and my answer to the first question is "no". Love would have no value to me whatsoever if I did not believe that those who love me choose to do so of their own volition.
I'm surprised people still think it's a choice who we fall in love with, free will or no free will.Biblical love (agape) is defined by a choice to love, not an emotion or chemical state. If we have no real will to choose, then this is not possible.
I'm surprised people still think it's a choice who we fall in love with, free will or no free will.
Exactly! But that love is art for the sake of art. It is trouble and trouble without reward, it is blood and guts on the sand.Biblical love (agape) is defined by a choice to love, not an emotion or chemical state. If we have no real will to choose, then this is not possible.
I disagree. While I don't doubt the existence of agape love, I see it as just another surge of chemicals. But, then, I'm a dirty atheist, what do you expect"Falling in love" deals with body chemicals which give us pleasant emotions. That is not "love" in the biblical sense. A bodily reaction which can stimulate beneficial emotions does not adequately communicate the idea of 'agape.'