knowledge is also the reason? knowledge also determines our choices?:SpheresOfBalance wrote: Mark Q: is there any reason why they do?
I can't speak for everyone, but I see that they do it so as to know. They reason that to be the ultimate human, king of the animals, via tools, that were invented because of what we have come to know, knowledge is the key element, that makes us more capable, successful, and thus live longer, the most desired attribute of all life, to stay death for even a second longer. At least I see this as the crux of the matter. And of course to know in truth, what it is, in being human, at our fullest potential, which requires knowledge of everything, that it is, in being a human, born of this universe.
Mark Q: that is the question. am i free to seek knowledge, or is there always reasons and causes causing me to do so?
You make distinctions, where I see there are none, you and your reason are one in the same thing, and causes, if you are referring to those internal to the being, are again, the same as you, to reiterate, ones relative level of knowledge, yields their relative level of reason, internal conflict, thus these internal causes, all of which are you, that only you have the ability to reconcile, by expanding your knowledge of self, which encompasses the entire universe, of which you're born.
do you see one causal universe, determined changes in one entire living being? everything affects everything if they are the same one?
free will is coherent with scientific knowledge? or more coherent than determined will?Mark Q: and this new knowledge is coherent with scientific knowledge?
I see that science is the most accurate implementation of the seeking of knowledge, that mankind has ever used before, and was, of course, a product of our knowledge. Of course I see that science is ever changing, keeping up with our current state of knowledge, thus one of the main reasons why it is the best, yet, method, that man has, to work at understanding himself fully.
and philosophy of free will is more coherent with scientific knowledge than philosophy of determined will?Mark Q: and that philosophy is coherent with scientific knowledge?
As far as I'm concerned, yes, as philosophy is the father of all science, again, as scientific inquiry is the most pure (accurate) method we have ever used to understand the universal truth of things. Remember that science is ever evolving, in pace with current human abilities (evolving). The only time a specific bit of it remains fixed, is when we have decided that it is in fact unwavering knowledge, or while we are presently incapable of furthering it's evolution, or lastly, if no one is actively pushing it's boundaries.
are philosophical and scientific theories logically determined or logic-free theories?
is model of will always logically determined model of will? is will always determined in our models?