Back to Mary and Jane. In a free will world, Mary decides of her own volition to change her mind and not to abort Jane because a friend of her own volition talks her out of it it.
Jane is around today to talk about it.
In a wholly determined world where Mary aborts Jane, every material variable/factor comes together only as it must...resulting in Jane being aborted only as she must be.
Jane is not around day to talk about it. Ask her about the difference.
Then how we [compelled or not] think about that differently.
Only I'm not insisting that how I think about is more reasonable than how you or others think about it. Why? Because I'm still stumped in being unable to explain this:
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 11:07 pmYou write this story.
As if simply writing it makes it true.
I suggest that in a determined world, Mary does not have to get an abortion and in a free-will world, Mary may get an abortion.
Of course! A parallel universe!!
Though, sure, this determined universe may have unfolded such that the only possible reality was Mary not aborting Jane. And in this free will universe Mary may have not changed her mind and went ahead with the abortion.
Right. Joe, of his own volition in a free will world, figured that mastering arithmetic might be a valuable skill to acquire in regard to his interactions with others. So, having chosen to master it, he knows for certain that if he is to receive 7 shipments of 7 gold bars from Jim over the course of the next 7 days, he will end up with 49 gold bars. But if he had decided of his own free will not to master Arithmetic and thinks that 7 X 7 = 51, he counts 49 gold bars, thinks Jim is ripping him off and blows Jim away.
If, however, he had chosen to master arithmetic, Jim would still be around.
Whereas the wholly determined Joe...from the cradle to the grave...figures only what his wholly determined brain compels him to figure. So, if he does shoot Jim, Jim was always -- fated? destined? -- to be a goner.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 11:07 pmSame here. You write a story and act as if it is true.
No, I argue that given those sets of circumstances, Joe having free will results in Jim still being around. Like Jane if Mary does. Whereas, you seem to be wobbling in the general direction of parallel universes where one Jane/Jim survives and the other ones don't. Or however you piece the components together in your head. Compelled or not...I don't know.
What, you think I'm suggesting that, even given free will, I can demonstrate when free will "kicked in" in the human brain when lifeless matter "somehow" evolved into living matter "somehow" evolved into conscious matter "somehow" evolved into us?
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 11:07 pmWhen does free-will kick in during everyday events? Because it doesn't seem to do anything when faced with the task of solving a math problem. OTOH, it does something when he decides to "master math".
Note to others:
You tell me how this pertains to the point that I raise.
I don't know definitively whether, in thinking, feeling, saying and doing things, we have free will or are wholly determined by the laws of matter. Let alone
if we do how and when and why it "kicked in". Let alone how it all pertains to facing math problems.
Any other speculations [perhaps] regarding the points I raised above about Joe and Jim and the gold bars?
Oh, yeah: click.
For the hard determinists, the past, the present and the future are no less intertwined in the only possible reality. One solves all problems like actors in a movie do. By doing exactly what they are told to do by the director. Only the director is no less scripted by the laws of matter themselves, right?
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 11:07 pmWhat director? Who? Who is making them do stuff?
Well, for some here it's God, of course. And, miraculously enough, they are even able to "somehow" reconcile God's omniscience with human autonomy.
Then those pantheist who make the universe itself God. Whatever that means...teleologically?
For determinists, it's the laws of matter -- nature.
Though, again, come on, whatever that means, right?
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 11:07 pm Those laws are not conscious. They don't have intentions.
Oh, so you do have a definitive explanation for how the laws of matter governing the universe going back to the Big Bang did manage to evolve over billions of years into living matter here on Earth in possession of conscious minds...evolving further into matter with self-conscious minds?
Matter in possession of motivation and intention? That ever elusive teleological component that most attribute to God. Maybe yours, maybe not?
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 11:07 pm Are you forced to go change direction when you come to a fence. Sure, but you're not being directed, as an actor is being directed.
Please. If my brain is but more matter wholly in sync with the laws of matter then I was compelled -- directed -- to come to the fence and then compelled -- directed -- to change directions when I did. Or, perhaps, compelled -- directed -- to take an axe to it?