Terrapin Station wrote: ↑Sun May 30, 2021 7:00 pm
If non-zero/non-one probability or "cosmic whim" sometimes obtains, what's not at all scientific is denying it.
Of course, nothing for which there is evidence must ever be evaded. But, what you are calling a, "non-zero/non-one probability," is not, "evidence," and is, in fact, physically impossible, unless one admits that there can be physical events without any physical cause or explanation.
If there are causes or reasons that explain any physical events other than those that can and are identified by the physical sciences, they are not physical causes (because they must be discovered some other way). That certainly does no deny the possibility of such events but does preserve what is meant by science.
If there could be physical events that were uncaused and unexplained in the merely physical world, if what you are calling, "non-zero/non-one probability or 'cosmic whim' sometimes obtained," were a fact, there would be no reason why the whole of physical existence could not completely vanish or entirely change its nature tomorrow. If any cosmic whim is possible, there is no way to determine how often or how radical such an undetermined event could or would be.
Fortunately, there are no such events and the laws of physics are perfectly safe and planes will not start falling from the sky, because there just is (and logically cannot be) any, "evidence," for what you are calling, "non-zero/non-one probability."
Terrapin Station wrote: ↑Sun May 30, 2021 7:00 pm
The task is to take note of the world as it is, however it happens to be. The task (in doing science, philosophy, etc.) isn't to try to make it fit our preconceptions, preferences or our failure to think outside of templates we might have had drilled into us via however we were socialized.
Yes, exactly. If one has been taught by their science and philosophy professors that, "everything is physical," [like some other radicals are taught and believe, "everything is mind," or, "everything is spirit," or pick your own everything is...] they are going to be forced to rationalize their way into explaining how one can both know the laws of physics correctly describe the behavior of physical existence and the contradictory view that they can be violated--sometimes.
Terrapin Station wrote: ↑Sun May 30, 2021 7:00 pm
Again, "everything happens deterministically" is a faith-based belief.
Absolutely, in exactly the same way believing everything is physical is a faith-based belief. There is zero evidence for undetermined physical events, but almost infinite evidence for undetermined living and conscious events.
I think our real difference is more a semantic disagreement than substantive one. You agree that there can be real events that are not physically determined, that is, explained in terms of the laws of physics alone, but think of those cases as exceptions. I agree that there are undetermined real events and that they are exceptions. The difference is, you want to call those exceptional cases physical, and I prefer to call them perfectly natural and ontological but not physical.
If you choose to call life, consciousness, and volition and those aspects of their behavior that cannot be described in terms of physical determination as, "physical exceptions," you certainly may. I prefer to call life, consciousness, and volition, "non-physical," to distinguish those attributes of living physical entities (organisms) from all those that are strictly determined by physical laws (the vast majority of physical existence).
Otherwise, I do not see there is much difference in our view, except that, for me, there must be an aspect of reality that is totally knowable and reliable (physically determined) or nothing can be truly known or certain, and what is capable knowing that knowable reality cannot itself be determined, or that knowledge is not possible.