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Explain Freewill

Socrastein

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Random choice is an oxymoron - if you randomly do something, you did not choose to do it. If you choose to do it, it is not random in any way but rather calculated and decisive.

And you probably said heads because that's what everyone else says ;) I say tails because I like to live on the edge.
 
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Charlie V

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Socrastein said:
And you probably said heads because that's what everyone else says ;) I say tails because I like to live on the edge.

You might be right, but did anybody check his coin?
I think it's a two-headed coin. ;)

Charlie
 
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thomas100

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OK, so let's leave coin flipping alone for the moment.

Socrastein said:
3. If every reason for which we make a choice is the result of other reasons that were consequence of choice, then we get an infinite regress of choices which is not only logically absurd but also observably false.

I'm stuck on this logically absurd and observably false infinite regress idea. Can you give examples of why it's logically absurd and observably false ?
 
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Socrastein

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I'm stuck on this logically absurd and observably false infinite regress idea. Can you give examples of why it's logically absurd and observably false ?

No problem. If we accept that every choice is made for a reason, then we have established a chain correct? The choice is linked to a reason, and that reason is either unchosen or chosen - if its chosen, then that choice is either unchosen or chosen - if its chosen, then that choice is either unchosen or chosen, on and on. However, this can't go on forever, because that would mean you have made infinite choices, and that's obviously impossible because, let's take me for an example, I have only been alive for 19 years and there's no way I've made infinite choices in those 19 years because infinite choices would require infinite time, and nobody has been alive for infinite years... right?

So let's say I choose to eat a sandwich.
I chose to eat the sandwich because I chose to have lunch.
I chose to have lunch because I was hungry from choosing not to eat breakfast.
I chose not to eat breakfast because I chose to sleep in late.
I chose to sleep in late cause I was tired cause I chose to stay up late last night.
I chose to stay up late last night because I chose to debate on Christianforums rather than sleep.
Etc.

So, we can see that a simple choice can be traced back pretty far if we look into it enough, and so far all of these choices are results of other choices, and so nothing is really 'determined' so to speak because it all rests on a choice, right? However, it cannot all rest on a choice, because that would mean every choice I make can be traced back through infinite other choices, and its impossible that I've made an infinite number of choices in my finite existence. Therefore, sooner or later, we will come to a choice I made for a reason I had no control over - due to genetic, environmental, and/or biological factors. Sooner or later, you have to have a starting point, and that starting point has to be an unchosen factor. So, if every choice is a consequence of a reason, and that reason is either an unchosen factor or another choice, either way you eventually find everything rooting back to things we can't control.

Thusly, every choice we make is really the result of previous conditions, and those previous conditions are either other choices or unchosen factors, and sooner or later you MUST get back to unchosen factors. In other words, not only do we not have free will, but free will doesn't even make any sense, because we can't even imagine what a free will is. The only will that makes any sense is a will bound by and determined by previous conditions and unchosen factors.

If you really think about it, you'll see that the only other possbility is a random will, which isn't determined by previous factors, and once you have randomness, or indetermination, you don't have choice at all, you have chaos.

People say that determinism takes away our freedom, but I say rather that indeterminism takes away our freedom.

The key of this issue is the fact that either your choices are determined by past factors or they are not, and if they are not then they are random.
 
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philosopher1on1

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I take it nobody here has had a breakdown or been incarserated in any case to truly define choice you first have to lose all rights to that ability and when you are able to regain a level of perspective you then become aware of the implications of what choice truly represents, its just like dominoes, a chain reaction that your actions based upon your decissions based upon your logic determine your destiny and you have to live with it and the worst thing is so do we, be mindful in all you do as that is the true measure of who you realy are.... :amen:
 
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CSMR

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Stairway said:
I understand people make choices, however all of our choices are affected by two things; biological makeup and social learning. We of course are unable to choose either of these things, which begs the question, how do we (humans) really have free will?
We don't. People believe in free will because:
1. They mistakenly fail to distinguish it from choice, which in no way contradicts determinism.
2. They like to think that they can become better, because this is a more optimistic position, and so do not want to accept their nature as a fixed process. They therefore accept a vague notion of a self which is mutable and changed by the self - oh, but not by the same mutable self, but by a "free" self that stands above it. This confusion also serves the purpose of dimming their introspective vision so that they can not see the fullness of the evil inside them.
 
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mepalmer3

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Socrastein said:
You guys who are arguing for free will must have either missed David's reference to three-body gravity, or simply didn't know what he meant by that. He was referring to a classic example of how science and mathematics in its infant state right now can't even accurately describe bodies in motion under the influence of gravity beyond two objects. We can accurately plot the motion of two bodies acting on eachother gravitationally, but any more than that, including only three, and we lose tremendous power of prediction. Trying to accurately describe 3 gravitational bodies in motion is far too complicated for science and math right now - so if we can't even do that, it is pointless and absurd to demand that we accurately predict human behavior, which is subject to COUNTLESS factors, many of which we aren't even aware of. We are barely scratching the surface, for example, of exactly when and how genetic code plays a role in our actions and personality. That's just one factor that will give us problems probably for all time.

What I'm real curious about is you are saying, "There are COUNTLESS factors that we are not aware of" and you're coming to the conclusion that there in fact is no free will. How does the unknown fit into your theory? Why do you assume that those countless factors support your conclusion?

As far as defining free will, I think I posted previously that I am taking it in a basic sense to mean the "freedom to choose irregardless of the influence." Certainly people are influenced, so if we're talking about "free will" as a choice that happens to be "free" from influence, then I don't know of anyone who talks about that. Nor are we talking i believe about "free will" in the sense that we can choose something outside of the choices presented to us. When I pull up to McDonalds, I don't get to choose to become president of the united states at that point. Also, if I want to sing aloud some song, I can either make it up or I can choose one I know. There's a chance that the song I make up is the same that someone else made up. But those are my choices if I decide to sing a song. At that point, I don't have any reason, unless I resort to an assumption that there is no god, that would lead me to believe that I have no control over my choice. But as I've mentioned numerous times, through introspection, I can clearly see that I can in fact change my mind on a dime. Certainly you can speculate that my action was not the choice of my will but of some chemical change in my body or environmental factors. But until you have any sort of scientific evidence of your claim, I don't really see any reason to believe your hypothesis as it's contradictory to my own observations. By no means, as I've also previously mentioned, do I think this is proof on my end. But again, by no means is your suggestion, which is still nothing more then conjecture, has any proof behind it.

Socrastein said:
By the way mepalmer, it is wholly irrelevent that billions of people think they have free will - are you aware that this is one of the weakest, and most common, logical fallacies known as an appeal to majority? It doesn't help your case one bit, but in fact has the opposite effect - rendering your accredited understanding of reason to be questioned.

I know it's a fallacy :) I heard a guy arguing for evolution the other day using this argument (the majority of biologists say it's true so it must be so) and I thought it would be funny to use it the same way he did.
 
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Socrastein

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Your entire "argument", mepalmer, seems to rest on the assumption that I am merely conjecturing and that there is no evidence to support the claims that I am making. You are mistaken in this assumption.

Haven't you ever heard of neurons? Do you understand how they work? If you had and do, then surely you would understand that the chemical structure of our brains shows thoughts and choices to be nothing more than electrical signals bouncing around between our neurons. Emotions, calculations, deliberations - all of these can and have been tied to nothing more than electric activity in a certain part of the brain, revealed of course through brain scan imaging. When someone is working out a math problem, neurons are firing in one part of the brain, and when someone is looking at violent imagery, neurons are firing in another part of the brain. There isn't a single process or emotion that hasn't been strongly correlated with a region of neurons within the brain that are specified to that function. Memories, thoughts, and choices have all been observed as nothing more than electrical signals following the paths of protein chains in the brain.

The above is common knowledge as far as neuroscience goes, and I'm quite surprised that you've never heard of it. Now that you have heard of it, then surely you realize that all the evidence points to our brain being nothing more than a complicated biological computer. We've never seen a single shred of evidence to suggest that there is some "free will" floating around in the brain like a ghost in the machine. Nor can we expect to ever see such evidence, since such mind/matter dualism is horribly contradictory in that if the physical is nothing like the spiritual and the spiritual is nothing like the physical, then by definition they can have no effect on eachother. They cannot affect eachother any more than you can throw a baseball at the Gross National Product. They are completely separate 'realms', and any interaction between them destroys the very reality of dualism.

That all being said, it seems that the only conjecturing is on your part in thinking that the brain is anything other than a physical, biological computer. Your "observations" say nothing whatsoever, because the only thing you or anyone else observes is choice, and as was said choice is not contradictory to determinism in the least - we can be causally determined to choose, and its still a choice. An undetermined choice is randomness, as I've said over and over again, and yet you manage to ignore this point and simply accuse me of conjecturing.

The evidence is all on my end, and you are the one who is merely assuming. I would like to see some evidence on your part that suggests there is something at work in our brains aside from causally determined chemical processes.

I would also like to see a better definition of "free will" that:
A) Avoids the inherent contradictions that are pointed out in my opening post
B) Differentiates itself from a causally determined choice
C) Doesn't appeal to ignorance through the fact that the brain/environment interaction is a long way from being fully understood

Consider that in any computer game you of course will not understand all the processes that go into making the AI act the way it does - this does not mean that it is okay to assume that it has "free-will", since all the available evidence suggests otherwise, despite the admittedly unknown factors.

I heard a guy arguing for evolution the other day using this argument (the majority of biologists say it's true so it must be so) and I thought it would be funny to use it the same way he did.

I have doubts that your paraphrasing of his words is an accurate and fair one. I suspect that its more likely that he referenced the scientific authority of biologists in supporting the idea that evolution is indeed true, and there is no fallacy in that. If he truly said exactly what you say he did, then I am mistaken, but I suspect that such is not the case. Regardless, there's nothing funny about using a stupid fallacy like that, and I don't know why you think it is.
 
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mepalmer3

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Socrastein said:
Your entire "argument", mepalmer, seems to rest on the assumption that I am merely conjecturing and that there is no evidence to support the claims that I am making. You are mistaken in this assumption.

That all being said, it seems that the only conjecturing is on your part in thinking that the brain is anything other than a physical, biological computer. Your "observations" say nothing whatsoever, because the only thing you or anyone else observes is choice, and as was said choice is not contradictory to determinism in the least - we can be causally determined to choose, and its still a choice. An undetermined choice is randomness, as I've said over and over again, and yet you manage to ignore this point and simply accuse me of conjecturing.

You're assumption here relies on a naturalistic philosophy that you are unable to prove. Further, as far as neurons go, what you are pointing out is that stuff happens in the brain when people think. That doesn't conflict with my idea that people have free will.

The 3rd premise in your argument also didn't seem true.

3. If every reason for which we make a choice is the result of other reasons that were consequence of choice, then we get an infinite regress of choices which is not only logically absurd but also observably false.

Why would there be an infinite regress of choices? Are you suggesting that this going back to before our conception? I didn't choose anything that I know of until I was born, so going backwards forever is invalid.

Also, you're trying to tie a logical reason for making a choice. What if I'm just bored? If I'm bored I may decide to do anything. The reason I'm doing something may be that I'm bored, but it's not the reason why I'm doing some specific thing such as driving my car around the block, or watching a movie. Also, I may be very hungry, but I just decide not to eat today. So if I look at my life at any moment, I may very well have thousands of reasons to do something, each legitimate. So how do I choose between those reasons? Say I have reason to do everything possible -- simply because I can do everything possible. No reason need compell me above the others, and even if something IS very compelling, I can simply ignore that reason and move onto something else. This is why I think we have free will. Because we can't determine what people will do based solely on the possibilities of what they can do.
 
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David Gould

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mepalmer3 said:
This is why I think we have free will. Because we can't determine what people will do based solely on the possibilities of what they can do.

We cannot determine what will happen in a three-body gravitational problem. Is that evidence that planets have free will?
 
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mepalmer3

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David Gould said:
We cannot determine what will happen in a three-body gravitational problem. Is that evidence that planets have free will?

You may be right. Gravity could be controlled by some god or other force. Do you have any evidence that gravity doesn't have free will?

Do you see what you're saying though? You're saying, this stuff really gets complex, so we know we don't have free will. You're not giving me any evidence that free will is some sort of myth. You haven't given me any scientific reasoning as to why I seem to have millions of choices at any given second and can choose any of them. You're giving me excuses as to why you don't have a reason, but then you're going a step farther and you're drawing a conclusion.

Further with the comment about Neurons earlier. We see a lot of activity in people's brains, but that doesn't imply that that's where the thought originated. It's still in the air as to whether or not we really have a soul/mind apart from ourselves. There are a number of scientists who believe that we do. But for the analogy, when we look at a muscle contracting, we see a lot of activity within that muscle, but we don't think it's command to contract came from itself -- we think the signal came from the brain. But similarly, when we see activity in the brain, we don't know if there is thought outside of the brain that is causing that activity. Some poeple think that the brain is like a radio that receives and acts upon transmissions sent from our minds or souls.

Here's a quote from Michael Ruse, a darwinist philosopher: [taken from the case for a creator book where he's quoted at the beginning of the chapter. But Ruse's quote evidently comes from Can a Darwinian be a Christian?]

Why should a bunch of atoms have thinking ability? Why should I, even as I write now, be able to reflect on what I am doing and why should you, even as you read now, be able to ponder my points, agreeing or disagreeing, with pleasure or pain, deciding to refute me or redciding that I am just not worth the effort? No one, certainly not the Darwinian as such, seems to have an answer to this... The point is that there is no scientific answer.
 
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Socrastein

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Mepalmer said:
You're assumption here relies on a naturalistic philosophy that you are unable to prove.

Naturalism would actually be the logically default position, and only is to be abandoned when we see proof that there is something more than the physical reality at work. There is no such evidence, and every day we are explaining more and more "mysteries" as mere consequences of the physical world. You're right to say that my argument rests on the assumption of naturalism, but you're wrong to think that that's an invalid or unwarranted assumption.

Further, as far as neurons go, what you are pointing out is that stuff happens in the brain when people think. That doesn't conflict with my idea that people have free will.

Let me propose that hair growth is the result of tiny magical elves that pull on your hair whenever you sleep, making it stretch longer and longer over time.

As far as hair growth grows, you are pointing out stuff that happens on the head when people sleep. That doesn't conflict with my idea that magic elves make this happen.

Perhaps this will help to illustrate how your argument isn't an argument at all, but rather an irrational assumption predicated on nothing more than mere possibility.

Why would there be an infinite regress of choices? Are you suggesting that this going back to before our conception? I didn't choose anything that I know of until I was born, so going backwards forever is invalid.

Exactly, going backwards forever IS invalid, which is why it has to stop somewhere, and that somewhere is going to be something we have no control over. Every choice, no matter how many subsequent choices we can attribute it to, will eventually trace back to something we did NOT choose, and thus it was an inevitable consequence of prior circumstances.

This is why I think we have free will. Because we can't determine what people will do based solely on the possibilities of what they can do.

Once again you're simply arguing from ignorance - that is a fallacy my friend, sorry to say. Your conclusion is possible (Actually that can be debated as I have shown) but just because its possible doesn't mean it should be adopted, anymore than the possibility that my hair grows because magic elves come into my room at night and pull on it: you can't prove that it doesn't happen, and the fact that my hair grows fits in with my theory, but does that mean its a viable position? Absolutely not, because you need more than possibility to support a proposition, and right now all YOU have for free will is "Well I don't feel like I'm compelled, so I must therefore have free will". Just like I don't feel like my hair is growing throughout the day, so magic elves must be pulling on it while I'm asleep.

Gravity could be controlled by some god or other force. Do you have any evidence that gravity doesn't have free will?

Before I see you make this mistake AGAIN, take a look at this:

"An appeal to ignorance is an argument for or against a proposition on the basis of a lack of evidence against or for it. If there is positive evidence for the conclusion, then of course we have other reasons for accepting it, but a lack of evidence by itself is no evidence."

- http://www.fallacyfiles.org/ignorant.html

How many times do I have to say your argument is invalid before you stop using it? Its not an argument at all, its ridiculous.

You're saying, this stuff really gets complex, so we know we don't have free will.

Straw man. Neither Dave nor I are saying that, we are actually saying that since all the evidence, emperical and logical, suggests we don't have free will, and there's no compelling evidence that suggests we do, then the only rational position to adopt is that we in fact do not have free will.

You haven't given me any scientific reasoning as to why I seem to have millions of choices at any given second and can choose any of them.

So if I rewind your life over and over the point of a crucial choice with many possibilities, are you saying that you won't choose the same thing every time? If all the conditions are the same and you still make a different choice, then their is no reason at all for your choices and they are completely random! If you would make the same choice every single time, then your choice is a natural consequence of the conditions you are on and the state of your brain, which is not free will. This is a point I established in my very first post - either your choice is consequence of a reason, or it is not, and if it is not it is random - so the only to possibilities are determinism or indeterminism: the law of excluded middle itself says there's no other possibility, and since 'free will' doesn't fit into either of the two possibilities, it isn't even a sensabile concept.

We see a lot of activity in people's brains, but that doesn't imply that that's where the thought originated.

Yes, it does imply that actually. The same way if every time I hear talking I see my friend's mouth moving, that implies that the sounds are coming from his mouth.

It's still in the air as to whether or not we really have a soul/mind apart from ourselves.

Only as a possibility with ZERO evidence in favor of it - such a possibility is only adopted by irrational people.

There are a number of scientists who believe that we do.

Not as a result of scientific evidence, simply as a result of their religious dispositions.

But for the analogy, when we look at a muscle contracting, we see a lot of activity within that muscle, but we don't think it's command to contract came from itself -- we think the signal came from the brain. But similarly, when we see activity in the brain, we don't know if there is thought outside of the brain that is causing that activity. Some poeple think that the brain is like a radio that receives and acts upon transmissions sent from our minds or souls.

Fallacy = False analogy

You leave out the crucial difference that we can trace electrical signals from the muscle along nerves back to the brain - that is emperical evidence that the brain is causing the muscle to move. If we didn't see any such connection, then we would be reasonable to believe that the muscle somehow commands itself. However, there is NO such evidence for a connection between some mystical soul and our brain.

And why don't you address the problem with dualism I raised earlier - if the brain and the mind/soul are in completely separate realities, how can they interact? Like I said before, you can't throw a baseball (Physical object) at the Gross National Product (Abstract concept) because they belong in completely different realities and thusly cannot interact in any way whatsoever. If they are able to interact then they are not in separate realities at all, but are interacting through one single reality, and if the soul is in the same reality as the brain, it is a physical entity, in which case I ask you this: how come we haven't found it yet?

Why should a bunch of atoms have thinking ability? Why should I, even as I write now, be able to reflect on what I am doing and why should you, even as you read now, be able to ponder my points, agreeing or disagreeing, with pleasure or pain, deciding to refute me or redciding that I am just not worth the effort? No one, certainly not the Darwinian as such, seems to have an answer to this... The point is that there is no scientific answer.

As a philosopher, I am embarassed to share my name with Mr. Ruse. His entire statement is a little more rational if it is made to end with "... yet". For a long time there was no scientific answer for things like lightning, rainbows, disease, light, or life itself - that never made it okay to conclude that they must have supernatural causes. The same applies to the problem of conciousness - there's every reason to believe neuroscience and evolutionary biology will solve it soon, and there is no reason to assume that it must be supernaturally caused by the "soul".
 
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mepalmer3

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Socrastein said:
Naturalism would actually be the logically default position, and only is to be abandoned when we see proof that there is something more than the physical reality at work. There is no such evidence, and every day we are explaining more and more "mysteries" as mere consequences of the physical world. You're right to say that my argument rests on the assumption of naturalism, but you're wrong to think that that's an invalid or unwarranted assumption.

After all of this you still have no theory. You still have made no predictions. You can't make a single prediction. You're simply not putting forth any science. Naturalism is only the default view if you happen to take that worldview. Since I happen to believe the evidence weighs heavily on the side of theism, I find your presupposition wrong. By all means continue to believe so... but it's only an argument that will work for people who don't believe in any sort of god, and it won't work for people who do a bit of honest introspection.

Socrastein said:
Straw man. Neither Dave nor I are saying that, we are actually saying that since all the evidence, emperical and logical, suggests we don't have free will, and there's no compelling evidence that suggests we do, then the only rational position to adopt is that we in fact do not have free will.

You're ignoring scientific research suggesting a separate mind.

http://custance.org/Library/MIND/response.html

Again, you're choosing to ignore personal observations as to whether or not we can choose what to do.

Socrastein said:
So if I rewind your life over and over the point of a crucial choice with many possibilities, are you saying that you won't choose the same thing every time? If all the conditions are the same and you still make a different choice, then their is no reason at all for your choices and they are completely random! If you would make the same choice every single time, then your choice is a natural consequence of the conditions you are on and the state of your brain, which is not free will. This is a point I established in my very first post - either your choice is consequence of a reason, or it is not, and if it is not it is random - so the only to possibilities are determinism or indeterminism: the law of excluded middle itself says there's no other possibility, and since 'free will' doesn't fit into either of the two possibilities, it isn't even a sensabile concept.

I do think it very likely that I would choose a great deal of things differently. Like I said, there are a great number of things I decide with perhaps hundreds of reasons. But I don't necessarily take the one that has the greatest reason every time. And sometimes I just enjoy random decisions. You're also ignoring the fact that I could simply be further evolved.

Regardless... I realize that you feel like you really bolstered your argument by quoting some web pages, calling me ignorant a number of times, and pointing out fallacies. You really haven't given any proof for what you've said, and it directly contradicts what I see when I observe my own behavior. But stated as such, I don't think your idea is falsifiable. If you would step up and make a few predictions then we might could take a serious look at your idea. But until then it sounds more like science fiction and is not all that interesting.
 
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CSMR

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mepalmer3, what is it that you are arguing for? The fact that we have choices, or something more? Surely something more, since everyone here I am sure knows that we have a mind and make choices.
mepalmer3 said:
even if something IS very compelling, I can simply ignore that reason and move onto something else. This is why I think we have free will. Because we can't determine what people will do based solely on the possibilities of what they can do.
This is a wrong deduction. It is certainly true that people can act against what compels their choice. Determinism doesn't limit what people can do, only what they will do.
Since I happen to believe the evidence weighs heavily on the side of theism
Which asserts God as omnipotent and omniscient. As Luther said, all in this world happens according to the necessitating foreknowledge of God. This is a much stronger argument than naturalistic ones - although they have their place - since it is a matter of faith rather than of unknowable opinion. Scientific processes are always unknown, as accepted by you and socrastein, and at best probable.

socrastein, perhaps this question would clarify your argument and the position you are arguing against:
You refer to scientific theories which if true determine reality.
What does it add to your argument to be asserting these that these theories are true, and that there are other theories which will complete the picture, over and above saying "what will be will be"? That is to say taking all of observable history, past and future, and noting that it determines reality.
 
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CSMR

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A nice expression of the difference between choice and free will, which shows determinism in its religious and moral aspect:

I may refuse money of mine own strength, but to put away love unto riches out of mine heart can I not do of mine own strength...Wherefore of a man's own strength is the law never fulfilled, we must have there unto God's favour and his spirit, purchased by Christ's blood.
Nevertheless when I say a man may do many things outwardly clean against his heart, we must understand that man is but driven by divers appetites, and the greatest appetite overcometh the less and carrieth the man away violently away with her.

Tyndale, preface to Romans (1534)
 
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mepalmer3

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CSMR said:
This is a wrong deduction. It is certainly true that people can act against what compels their choice. Determinism doesn't limit what people can do, only what they will do.

I'll be happy to read up some more on the popular differences between determinism and indeterminism before I respond anymore on this.

So in sort of a mathematical way...

if these are my choices (A, B, C, D). You're saying determinism says that I can do A, B, C, or D, but that actually I will do C? If I will do C, then how was A, B, or D ever a possibility? But, rewinding time, you're also saying that determinism says that every time C will be the choice?

Can anyone point me to any scientific articles on this? And you said this was a theory. Are you saying it's a "scientific" theory? All along I've been asking for some testable experiments on this.
 
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Socrastein

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Mepalmer said:
After all of this you still have no theory. You still have made no predictions.

Actually, I can think of one prediction of determinism right off the top of my head: a strong correlation will be found between childhood conditions and future behavior. Also, a strong correlation will be found between genetic variations and behavior. Do I even have to assert that this is the case? Surely you are aware of it.

Naturalism is only the default view if you happen to take that worldview.

Incorrect. Naturalism is the default view until sufficient reason has been established that supports the existence of supernatural realities that effect the physical world. You don't assume that there are supernatural realities until you see evidence of them. If someone told you they could fly, would you believe them without ever asking for a demonstration? I should hope not.

You're ignoring scientific research suggesting a separate mind.

Actually, I've heard such arguments before, but they are very weak to say the least. Take a look at the following:

http://fp.bio.utk.edu/wisdom/Essays/consciousness.htm

Again, you're choosing to ignore personal observations as to whether or not we can choose what to do.

Go back and actually read my posts, and you'll see I have stated numerous times that we all choose. What I am arguing is that "free" choice is a nonsensical concept with no emperical or logical support.

I do think it very likely that I would choose a great deal of things differently.

Then you need to somehow find a way to avoid the indetermination that destroys any choice at all, be it free or no, which is a consequence of uncaused choices.

I don't necessarily take the one that has the greatest reason every time. And sometimes I just enjoy random decisions.

By the very nature of choice, every choice you make is made because of a greater reason to make it than any other. Nobody chooses something when they could have chosen something for a better reason.

And what you think are random decisions only appear to be so because your brain cannot possibly understand the complicated processes that dictate the result of a trivial deliberation: I would espouse this as yet another prediction of determinism ;)

I realize that you feel like you really bolstered your argument by quoting some web pages, calling me ignorant a number of times, and pointing out fallacies.

Arguing from ignorance is different from being ignorant. And what makes you think that showing your argument to be a fallacious one doesn't bolster my own? The very nature of a logical fallacy requires that anyone who relies on one has an inherently weak argument. Since I have not noticed, and you have not pointed out, any fallacies in my argument, I appear to have the more logically sound argument than you.

You really haven't given any proof for what you've said, and it directly contradicts what I see when I observe my own behavior.

The first post I made in this thread was proof of what I've been arguing all along. Since you have yet to refute it, it is still valid proof.

I don't think your idea is falsifiable.

Of course it is. Let me quote myself, and refresh your memory as to when I specifically gave you ways in which you could falsify my argument.

ME! said:
I would also like to see a better definition of "free will" that:
A) Avoids the inherent contradictions that are pointed out in my opening post
B) Differentiates itself from a causally determined choice
C) Doesn't appeal to ignorance through the fact that the brain/environment interaction is a long way from being fully understood

If you would step up and make a few predictions then we might could take a serious look at your idea. But until then it sounds more like science fiction and is not all that interesting.

Funny, I was just thinking "Man, if this guy could step it up and make a few logically valid arguments, then I might take a serious look at his idea. Until then it sounds more like emotional ranting and is not all that convincing."

CSMR said:
What does it add to your argument to be asserting these that these theories are true, and that there are other theories which will complete the picture, over and above saying "what will be will be"?

Emperical support.
 
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