Ned wrote:Wyman, I am sorry that you did not follow my arguments.
I know: life, consciousness, etc., are extremely complex phenomena, poorly understood and just being probed by science.
It is a bit similar to the mystery of wave-particle duality in physics (I am sure you are familiar with it) that also baffles the human mind.
So, we are reduced to speculate and to form our opinions based on partial knowledge and on our life experiences.
So I did, and so do all of you.
But..."presumptions"???
Yes, upon what do you base your ethics and why? That's all I'm asking. The denial of free will is not new, although I will say that it has baffled many great minds. As I referenced above, Dostoevsky grappled with it extensively in Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov. I think the impetus behind much of Nietzsche's writing came from the same well. These were 19th century writers responding to both the results of Newtonian physics, new idea of socialism, as well as the new 'discovery' of the subconscious - the unconscious impulses that seem to guide our actions - counter to the idea of free will. Of course there have been countless others who have explored the subject.
I do get impatient with people who discover some idea and then act as if it is shiny and new and that other people just don't understand it - "if only others were 'aware' of the idea, they would see at once how my conclusions follow." The idea is not new, it is just that your conclusions do not necessarily follow -i.e. you act as if they follow from the fact that there is no such thing as free will and I pointed out that they do not; rather, they follow from your adoption of 'the Golden rule' as a maxim (or presumption, assumption, axiom, etc.)