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Originally Posted by elman
I decided to move my arm. That is what happened that caused my arm to move.
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I refuse to deny my observations and experience as being what they appear to be. I do not deny they are dependable and without flaws, but they are the best we have and you have not shown me any reason to believe they are completely illusion.
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Because robots follow their programing and humans create programing.
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You build a straw horse to knock down. I never assumed experience is utterly infallible. Have you assumed experience is utterly fallible?
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You should not make those kind of assumptions. If you mean I am not part of the cause, then I don't agree.
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What prejudice? The one about not assuming all experience is just illusion?
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If it is not true in everyday language it is not true in the search for truth and reality-philosophy.
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My perceptions are that I do have the ability to move or not move my arm just about anytime I decide either way. What is your perception on that, that is different from mine?
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I refuse to thow it out simply because you tell me philosophy and logic demands I do so.
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Present your argument that will prove my perception of reality is an illusion. You have stated this over and over but you have not presented a compelling argument to support it.
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The programer's decision is what caused the selection as it occured.
Originally Posted by elman
I decided to move my arm. That is what happened that caused my arm to move.
There may have been and probably were many factors that I used to arrive at my decision to move my arm. Whatever factors there were that I used to decide to move my arm, it was not these factors that caused me to move my arm. They were only contributing factors. They were the reasons upon which I based my decision, but they were not the cause of my decision. I was the cause of my decision while using these reasons.Please answer the question I asked, not the one you'd like to answer - I asked what happened which caused your decision. You already told me an immediate cause of your arm moving. I want to know what happened to cause your decision.
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I refuse to deny my observations and experience as being what they appear to be. I do not deny they are dependable and without flaws, but they are the best we have and you have not shown me any reason to believe they are completely illusion.
Moving my hand to type this answer.What is a complete illusion? Tell me, what sensory experience do you have that makes you so sure that you have free will?
Sometimes I decide not to answer a post and I always am involved in what I anwer.David Hume gives us a valuable heuristic here - every empirical fact should be based on an impression, that is to say, something we receive directly from the senses. What do you receive from the senses that convinces you so surely that the outcome of your decision isn't determined?
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Because robots follow their programing and humans create programing.
I would not be surprised if we have some programming in our dna. That is not the question. The question is does this programing that we have determine the details of what we do?But you don't know whether or not humans have their own programming, either given to them by nature or by a deity (simple molecules certainly have a kind of programming) so your argument seems to be based entirely on the fact that you don't know that humans have "programming."
What knowledge proves I am unable to change my mind and do something different than I did?Arguments based on lack of knowledge are generally considered to not be very good.
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You build a straw horse to knock down. I never assumed experience is utterly infallible. Have you assumed experience is utterly fallible?
I doubt that Libet or anyone else has proven our experiences to be utterly fallible.I assume that such experience as I think you are relying on (since you've not actually detailed your experience at all) is so shaky, and also so similar to the same kind of experience as Libet proved to be utterly fallible, that it should certainly bow to rational thought.
You have failed to present an argument that convinces me to assume my experiences are uttlerly illusiuon.You seem to be unable to follow the argument though, so perhaps it's not surprising you cling to whatever experience it is you have.
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You should not make those kind of assumptions. If you mean I am not part of the cause, then I don't agree.
I doubt it. I think someone else caused his death.Again, you're not looking at the argument, or the examples, or anything I say except for the conclusion. Take the example of Lee Harvey Oswald. Did he cause J.F.K.'s death?
You stopped going back too soon. You should go back to Oswald deciding to pull the trigger if we assume he did in fact shoot Kenedy.Well, of course he did. But I bet the death certificate didn't say, "cause of death: Lee Harvey Oswald." You see, what happened was that the bullet entered Kennedy's body, and that caused it to collide with nerves and blood vessels in his brain. This caused signals passed from other nerves in his brain, and blood from other vessels, to be disrupted. Etc etc.
We can also work backwards. The bullet's motion was caused by Oswald pulling the trigger, right? But in actual fact what happened was Oswald's finger muscles contracted, causing his finger to move, causing the trigger to move, causing the firing pin to strike the bullet, causing the volume around the propellant to decrease, causing the propellant to react, causing the pressure to increase, causing the bullet to move.
If we assume Oswald did the shooting, then the cause of the shooting is Oswald, not the gun or bullet he used.Now, both of these accounts of each action are correct, yes? But if we were trying to conduct a rigorous analysis of the causes involved, we'd want the more detailed one, right? But notice that it's not "Oswald" and it's not "The Bullet" which did any causing. It's the bullet's colliding or the movement of Oswald's finger.
I guess if you say Oswald acted alone, he caused the event by deciding to shoot. If you say Oswald was part of a conspiriacy, then perhaps someone else is partly the cause, along with Oswald. I assume you are arguing philosopically that Oswald had no choice but do what he did and should therefore not have been held responsible.I'm not leaving out the bullet, Oswald, or you in any of these accounts. You're still there it's just I'm not saying "The Bullet," "Oswald," or "You." I'm using certain events that are linked with these things. Because using the events is more accurate than just referring to the thing with which the events are associated. If I was conducting an inquest and I asked the autopsy team for the cause of death and they kept insisting it was Oswald, or the bullet, I'd be pretty irritated. Even though it's fine and accurate to say this in normal conversation, when we actually get into the analysis of causes it's not.
That doesn't mean it suddenly becomes wrong, it just means it's wrong in the particular context. Now, do or don't you agree that in these examples it is more accurate to talk about the events associated with the things we might usually say were the causes? Do you or don't agree that, therefore, what we really mean when we say "some thing caused an event" is actually something to do with an event associated with that thing?
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What prejudice? The one about not assuming all experience is just illusion?
First of all I question the validity of that report and secondly our not know exactly when we begin to make a decision does not surprise me that much. That does not mean we don't make a decision. It just means science is not able to analize it completely and determine when and how it is made.The one about assuming that you really do have any experience relating to free will. The one assuming that that experience is reliable. Even the one assuming that, when you are aware of starting to make a decision, you've already "got ready" to do the action, completely unawares.
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If it is not true in everyday language it is not true in the search for truth and reality-philosophy.
No I am saying words have meaning and they don't stop having meaning just because we start using them in a discussion on phiolosophy.Irrelevant since you don't talk about causal chains in everyday language. But your point appears to be that, if you say something in normal conversation, then you must entirely agree with that in every other context.
This is not understandable.You need to read some Wittgenstein - he has a lot to say about contextualism - that is, the philosophical principle that the truth value of a statement depends on the context in which you say it. For example, now you would say, presumably, that you know what you had a couple of days ago for breakfast. But if I said, are you certain, or, if you were in the witness box perhaps, then you wouldn't say you knew. In fact, it would be false to say you know, because the context implies a different standard.
If we agree on the meaning determinism and it means we are fooling ourselves into thinking we are moving our arms when actually something that happened billions of years ago is moving my arm at this particular moment in time, then the unreasonableness of that is not about context and definition of words.Same here. The context of philosophy requires a different standard of language. Just because you can say it in everyday language doesn't mean it makes sense now.
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My perceptions are that I do have the ability to move or not move my arm just about anytime I decide either way. What is your perception on that, that is different from mine?
Did your perception include the fact you were forced to eat the cookie? Did you get away with that excuse when you at a cookie you were told to not eat?Most of the time I move my arm I have no perception of any ability to move or not move it whatsoever. I just think "I want a cookie" and reach for it. Mostly, I am completely unaware of any choice at all. For much of my childhood, I had never even considered the question yet, crucially, I still thought I had some kind of free will because that just seems to be the inbuilt assumption in the absence of evidence.
Then you and I are in different worlds. When I move my finger I am very aware that I chose to do that.Now, suppose I am to make a decision - when, or whether, to move a finger. I am aware of making a decision. I have the experience of not knowing whether I am going to move it. I then have the experience of deciding to move it, and then it moves. At no point is there any perception which leaps out at me and shouts, "you have a choice! You could or could not move your finger!"
You may be ignorant of the timeing and your senses may not be correct on the timing. It may begin in your subconscious before occuring in the consicious, that is just a question of timing, not a question of cause.The only thing that implies that is not knowing whether I am going to move it. But that is pure ignorance - I don't somehow know that the outcome is not yet determined. I know I have not yet decided, but I do not perceive that the outcome of my decision is as yet undetermined.
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I refuse to thow it out simply because you tell me philosophy and logic demands I do so.
I have been attempting to engage it with you for some time now and no evidence is yet presented.You refuse also to even engage with that philosophy.
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Present your argument that will prove my perception of reality is an illusion. You have stated this over and over but you have not presented a compelling argument to support it.
As I recall did not Libet agree this did not prove lack of free will or choice?We already know that introspection is unreliable via Libet. So you need a pretty good reason to say that another closely related kind of introspection is infallible.
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The programer's decision is what caused the selection as it occured.
It was the consequences of the programers decision even if unforseen by the programer. I have said this many times now and you have not refuted it.But that is not saying that he decided which bucket the ball will going in - as you have already agreed with me.
So, who or what did make that selection?
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