Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 5:00 pm
New proposition:
Real life is incompatible with Determinism.
Take your best shot at explaining why I'm wrong, iambiguous...et al.
iambiguous wrote: ↑Thu Feb 17, 2022 6:35 amAgain, the assumption I start with here is that whatever explanation I give is the only explanation I was ever able to give because I assume further that my brain functions wholly in sync with the laws of matter.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 5:00 pm That's not an issue. I'm asking you AS a Determinist, so there's no need for you to tell me this at all. I know you believe it: I merely suggest you believe it on the basis of insufficient warrant.
So what is your warrant for believing it?
Need? If one starts with the assumption that
all of one's wants and needs precipitate beliefs that were never able
not to be, that's the
only issue.
You're still the one obligated to explain scientifically/philosophically how, chemically and neurologically, brain matter came to be as no other matter before it....capable of volition, autonomy, free will.
Meanwhile, I still acknowledge that the likelihood of my own argument here being even close to The Final Answer must be staggeringly remote. And even that presumes I am wrong about determinism which I may well be.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 5:00 pm The burden of proof runs the opposite way.
Materialists cannot merely stipulate in advance that "material" stuff is all that exists
unless anybody can prove otherwise. They can't simply have their way by default. They have no warrant for that belief either.
Right, like those who posit determinism are forbidden from placing the obligation on you. Again, if there is a default in this exchange it's your seeming arrogance in framing the issue given you own set of assumptions. I would never presume that myself...even given free will. In other words, re "the gap" and "Rummy's Rule", my speculations here are but a tangled intertwining of an educated guess and a wild-ass guess.
Which -- click -- in my opinion, you just whisk away in but another "world of words".
My point is that "proving things" is interchangeable with all the other things our brains are compelled to pursue as but more matter.
On the other hand, I flat out acknowledge I am unable to provide the definitive evidence that when lifeless/mindless matter did "somehow" configure into self-conscious living matter here on planet Earth, autonomy is only the embodiment of the psychological illusion of free will.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 5:00 pmFinally!
What took you so long to answer? Were you "concerned" about something?
Again, unbelievable!!!
I took as long as nature compelled me to take. I was as "concerned" as my brain commanded of me. Now, where is your own definitive proof that, on the contrary, you "got me" here with your clever reasoning. Definitive proof that this exchange is not the embodiment of the psychological illusion of free will.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 5:00 pm But let me not set to you so extreme a task as "definitive evidence." That isn't fair, because nobody has
perfect evidence for anything.
Unless, of course, human interaction in the waking world is the equivalent of human interaction in the dream world: wholly unfolding as a result of a brain wholly in sync with the laws of matter. If that is the case no evidence could not be perfect.
Right?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 5:00 pm Let me ask you this, instead: what is ANY evidence that "autonomy is an illusion," -- and then, later on, we can talk about the problem of non-living matter somehow magically becoming living, and then somehow becoming conscious, and then somehow becoming self-aware, then somehow becoming capable on debates about Compatiblilism...but thank you for pointing out an additional very serious problem for Determinists.
You're asking me? I suggest you take that question to those scientists who are not just exchanging "philosophical assumptions" in "worlds of words".
The men and women probing actual functioning brains, groping and grappling with the profound mystery that is "mindful matter".
Though, sure, no doubt about it: mindless, nonliving matter "somehow" evolving into mindful living matter here on planet Earth able to become aware of itself as either wholly determined or autonomous is nothing short of...an act of God?
Your own for example?
Then this part:
So, that, compelled or otherwise, I take my own "intellectual leap" to determinism "here and now". And this existential leap is predicated largely on the personal experiences I have had and the information and knowledge I have come across pertaining to the determinism/free will/compatibilism debate.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 5:00 pm Well, okay: it seems you say that some "personal experiences" plus some "information and knowledge" counts for you in favour of Determinism. That is exactly what I want to know.
Are you kidding me? Think of all the myriad experiences we had as children brainwashed into seeing ourselves in the world around us in vastly different ways. Think of all the experiences we had as adults that none of us are ever either fully aware of or in control of. All the countless variables bombarding us from every direction shaping and molding us in this direction rather than that in regard to things like this debate.
Grasping this
exactly?!
I'm reminded of that scene from "sex, lies and videotapes":
"Ann: I just wanna ask a few questions, like why do you tape women talkin' about sex? Why do you do that? Can you tell me why?
Graham: I don't find turning the tables very interesting.
Ann: Well, I do. Tell me why, Graham.
Graham: Why? What? What? What do you want me to tell you? Why? Ann, you don't even know who I am. You don't have the slightest idea who I am. Am I supposed to recount all the points in my life leading up to this moment and just hope that it's coherent, that it makes some sort of sense to you? It doesn't make any sense to me. You know, I was there. I don't have the slightest idea why I am who I am, and I'm supposed to be able to explain it to you?"
Of course, it's not like we don't have "the slightest idea" of how we came to think what we do about this particular discussion. But our ideas revolve around the life we lived. Leaving out what our conclusions might have been had for any number of reasons our lives had been very different.
And, again, always presuming that determinism as I understand it here and now is wrong. Why? Because it's not what you believe?