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Discussion and Debate
Discussion and Debate
Physical & Life Sciences
Does determinism really negate free will?
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<blockquote data-quote="Neogaia777" data-source="post: 76693662" data-attributes="member: 294131"><p>I would be very, very shocked if we ever eventually found out otherwise, or that it was not, etc...</p><p></p><p>I guess it is possible that someday when we do find the correct math on the subatomic level, that it completely changes our understanding of everything else, everything else that is, as of right now, all behaves very deterministicallly right now, etc, but it is also equally possible that we will find the subatomic world to behave very deterministically just like the rest all already does and is right now as, etc, and the latter I consider to be a lot more likely than the former, based on the fact that everything else that we do have the math for right now, "all does and is right now", so how cannot that which makes up it also be or do or be also, etc...</p><p></p><p>God Bless!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Neogaia777, post: 76693662, member: 294131"] I would be very, very shocked if we ever eventually found out otherwise, or that it was not, etc... I guess it is possible that someday when we do find the correct math on the subatomic level, that it completely changes our understanding of everything else, everything else that is, as of right now, all behaves very deterministicallly right now, etc, but it is also equally possible that we will find the subatomic world to behave very deterministically just like the rest all already does and is right now as, etc, and the latter I consider to be a lot more likely than the former, based on the fact that everything else that we do have the math for right now, "all does and is right now", so how cannot that which makes up it also be or do or be also, etc... God Bless! [/QUOTE]
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Does determinism really negate free will?
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