Yes, especially the last.Dubious wrote:I wonder if threads on predeterminism, determinism and free will are themselves determined, predetermined OR just plain all screwed up to the extent free will allows!
Free Will vs Determinism
Re: Free Will vs Determinism
- Immanuel Can
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Re: Free Will vs Determinism
Errant conflation of concepts: foreknowledge and predetermination are not identical at all. You cannot have the latter without the former, but you can have the former without the latter.Hobbes' Choice wrote:Show your reasoning! I won't hold my breath.
This is a generally-recognized distinction in theology, by all sides. A little background reading on what Calvinists and Non-Calvinists actually argue would help you.
Will you do the reading? I won't hold my breath.
Re: Free Will vs Determinism
Do you get a kick out of disappointing people?Immanuel Can wrote: I won't hold my breath.
Re: Free Will vs Determinism
I imagine it started at birth.Harbal wrote:Do you get a kick out of disappointing people?
Re: Free Will vs Determinism
IC wasn't born, he was created by God, he said so himself.uwot wrote: I imagine it started at birth.
- Hobbes' Choice
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Re: Free Will vs Determinism
Full of bluster - but as usual you avoid addressing the question.Immanuel Can wrote:Errant conflation of concepts: foreknowledge and predetermination are not identical at all. You cannot have the latter without the former, but you can have the former without the latter.Hobbes' Choice wrote:Show your reasoning! I won't hold my breath.
This is a generally-recognized distinction in theology, by all sides. A little background reading on what Calvinists and Non-Calvinists actually argue would help you.
Will you do the reading? I won't hold my breath.
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surreptitious57
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Re: Re:
Free will definitely exists and anything that is inevitable or unavoidable is deterministic by definitionken wrote:
Could it be possible that free will and determinism both belong and exist maybe even equally
Whether they exist equally may be impossible to know given the number of variables in that equation
- Hobbes' Choice
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Re: Re:
surreptitious57 wrote:Free will definitely exists and anything that is inevitable or unavoidable is deterministic by definitionken wrote:
Could it be possible that free will and determinism both belong and exist maybe even equally
Whether they exist equally may be impossible to know given the number of variables in that equation
What do you mean by free will? Free of or from what, exactly?
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surreptitious57
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Re: Free Will vs Determinism
The ability to choose between freely realisable alternatives so free from any restrictionHobbes Choice wrote:
What do you mean by free will? Free of or from what exactly?
Although only as it pertains to them so not free will in absolute terms only relative ones
Re: Re:
On the most basic simple fundamental level to Me they both exist. I do not see any number of variables so they exist equally.surreptitious57 wrote:Free will definitely exists and anything that is inevitable or unavoidable is deterministic by definitionken wrote:
Could it be possible that free will and determinism both belong and exist maybe even equally
Whether they exist equally may be impossible to know given the number of variables in that equation
Re: Free Will vs Determinism
It should be noted that just because an agent has free will there is no requirement for the agent to exercise free will. The actions can be perfectly consistent with determinism but does not rule out free will. Arguing from events proves nothing.
- Hobbes' Choice
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Re: Free Will vs Determinism
And how do you choose?surreptitious57 wrote:The ability to choose between freely realisable alternatives so free from any restrictionHobbes Choice wrote:
What do you mean by free will? Free of or from what exactly?
Although only as it pertains to them so not free will in absolute terms only relative ones
If you had the time again, exactly would you choose the same thing?
If the entire universe is a process of cause and effect; what causes your choice?
- Hobbes' Choice
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Re: Free Will vs Determinism
We can act to our will, but we are not free to will our will.thedoc wrote:It should be noted that just because an agent has free will there is no requirement for the agent to exercise free will. The actions can be perfectly consistent with determinism but does not rule out free will. Arguing from events proves nothing.
Our will must also be determined by all pertaining conditions.
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surreptitious57
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Re: Free Will vs Determinism
You choose whichever is most preferable to you at the timeHobbes Choice wrote:And how do you choose?surreptitious57 wrote:The ability to choose between freely realisable alternatives so free from any restrictionHobbes Choice wrote:
What do you mean by free will? Free of or from what exactly?
Although only as it pertains to them so not free will in absolute terms only relative ones
If you had the time again exactly would you choose the same thing?
If the entire universe is a process of cause and effect what causes your choice?
I would not choose exactly the same thing again if I had the knowledge of my original choices
Your choice is determined by the logical or emotional process which selects it over all others
- Immanuel Can
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Re: Free Will vs Determinism
This is true.thedoc wrote:It should be noted that just because an agent has free will there is no requirement for the agent to exercise free will. The actions can be perfectly consistent with determinism but does not rule out free will. Arguing from events proves nothing.
If someone had free will, but did not exercise it in a particular circumstance (like, say, letting her parents choose her college or university and her program for her) this would not suggest she'd given up her power to will differently and regret allowing herself to be predetermined by them, nor would it hinder her ability to use her free will on other occasions.
In fact, no proponent of free will has to say that there aren't some choices that are predetermined. Not one of us got to choose our birthplace, our hair and eye colours, our gender, our athletic potential, our capacity for learning, our cultural location, and a host of other such factors. For our first year of life, almost every decision we made (but not all) was made on our behalf, since we were nearly totally dependent on others for survival.
Nobody doesn't know all that. Nobody can contest it. The only question is, what is the case with the rest of our decisions?