Leo, you, like many others, miss Raw_Thought’s simple succinct point. Your blind allegiance to “science” as the ‘answer-to-all’, causes you to overlook the very ‘logic’ that gives science its credence. In regards to Raw_Thought’s point, "science" has absolutely NO relevance here, as this is simply a LOGIC problem, (…not a SCIENCE problem!)Obvious Leo wrote:There is a vast ocean of learning which awaits you if you venture into the deep waters of the science of embodied cognition. Come back in ten years time when you have some knowledge of it to contribute to the debate.
If something is not logically possible, then ALL the "science" in the world (and in the "vast ocean”) cannot make it possible, …true?
So if one cannot ‘know’ what one thinks until ‘after’ one thinks it, then it is NOT LOGICALLY POSSIBLE for one to ‘know’ what one thinks ‘before’ one thinks it. This is just simple logic, …and all the wishing and hoping (and science!) cannot change or undo this logical truth.
Raw_Thought is correct, …if free-will relies on our ability to 'knowingly' (consciously) construct those thoughts that determine our choices, then free-will is not logically possible. And since "science" cannot make the impossible, possible, then we must either accept it as such, and deal with it, or keep believing in impossible things. It’s your choice! (…but not really