davidm wrote: ↑Wed May 31, 2017 4:24 pm
Walker wrote: ↑Wed May 31, 2017 4:24 am
davidm wrote: ↑Wed May 31, 2017 3:55 am
What a profound response.
Thanks so much for your attention to this matter.
No evidence exists to support your assertion. Quite the contrary.
You were responding to my "assertion" that the fixity of the past does not imply the necessity of the past. So you think that all past, present and future contingent events are actually necessary events? That my eating eggs yesterday for breakfast has the same logical status as a triangle having three sides?
And you even say you have evidence for this astounding claim, which violates elementary logic?
I see you're one of those quick to label fellas.
Whatever you do, at the moment of doing, is what you have to do. Whatever you did was what you had to do. If you had to change your mind at the last moment from what you intended to do, then that’s part of the deciding process, and not the actual physical movement, or lack of physical movement,
that defines doing.
That you ate eggs for breakfast yesterday meant that you had to eat eggs for breakfast. True, there are many things that are available to eat for breakfast, but at the moment of action, you had to eat eggs. Secondary to this is all the things that you didn’t have to eat, such as
Cheerios!
When you fully realize that what you are doing in the present is what you must do, and that you have no choice about that, then you are no longer confused. Then you’re ready for an unconflicted consideration of the future that doesn’t put such an emphasis on a wishin and a hopin.
Thus, the original comment that you correctly identified as profound. I guess you’re just lucky that attention turned to this matter before you got yourself too lost.
Unless … say, were you being sarcastic?
The only time you can do other than what you're doing, or the only time you could have done other than what you did, is in your dreams, (i.e. imagination, unless you want to get picky).