If Mary had free will, perhaps that's what led her to abort. Perhaps she wanted that baby. Perhaps in a determined world her friend's speech would have convinced her, it was so compelling and presented an understanding of Mary so well, if causes led inevitable to effects, Mary would not have aborted, but because this was a free will universe, she was free to ignore all causes and even her own desires and she aborted it.iambiguous wrote: ↑Mon Dec 04, 2023 11:42 pm Now, if Mary had free will, there was the possibility that John or others of their own free will might have been successful in changing her mind about aborting Jane.
If we really don't know if this is a free will world or a determined world, then we don't know if her aborting the fetus was only possible because of free will or if it was determined.
Not a single word of that explains what you mean when you say "tell that to Jane". Not a single word of that explains how one of us might be expected to tell Jane anything at all
well, you've asserted that a couple of times without explaining why it was ludicrous....from FJ.
And the "blistering critique" comment was meant to be ironic from my frame of mind. That and reflecting the manner in which from time to time I am inclined to play the polemicist here. Or as with Prom75 -- remember him? -- the smart-ass.
I actually thought that his/her post above was ludicrous. Only I admit it may well be my own reasoning here that is ludicrous.
Perhaps you could point to the part where you explained what he asked.So, once again, we will have to agree to disagree regarding the relevance of my points.
As for this...
On the one hand I'm disappointed. It was a good faith go at what I thought we might have missed. But the upside is...how consistent you are....I have no clear understanding at all what your point is here.
Uh, huh. You mention people should talk to Jane, an aborted fetus who never got to live and it has nothing to do with whether something was bad or good.It's not whether our experiences are bad or good but what on earth it means to call any experience bad or good in a world where you could never have not had the experience. A world in which, in calling an experience bad or good, you were in turn entirely compelled to.
Not, Tell that to Mary. But tell that to Jane was what you said. OK. That makes no sense, but OK.
Same here...
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Dec 04, 2023 10:32 pmBut, 1) if that's how you meant it, why wouldn't you say that in response to his simple question? and 2) there are places elsewhere where it sounds much more literal. What would Sam Harris say to Jane is asked.
well, obviously it doesn't apply. If you did not mean what my charitable interpretation suggested, then, well, of course you didn't say it earlier.How this point pertains to my assessment above is beyond my grasp here and now.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Dec 04, 2023 10:32 pmFurther you presented a more balanced view of the abortion outcomes in your previous post. Mary might have been determined to give birth. You did leave out the in the free will world hundreds of mothers capriciously decide to abort, even though they want the babies, but their wants are not longer compelling in the least, because it's a free will universe where one can choose free of past influences including one's own desires.
No, cause It's not whether our experiences are bad or good but what on earth it means to call any experience bad or good in a world where you could never have not had the experienceYou'd have to run this by the women confronting "the agony of choice in the face of uncertainty" when dealing with an unwanted pregnancy in a free will world.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Dec 04, 2023 10:32 pmIf you just presented the scenario in a way that didn't make it seems like determinism leads to bad things and free will leads to less bad things, that would go a long way to people dropping their reactions.
HOw could free will be rooted in dasein? Free will is free from past states and causes. One is precisely NOT determined by one's culture, personality, past experiences, psychology, family patterns and so on. Free will goes precisely against your ideas of dasein leading to one's beliefs and actions. dasein, as you use, fits well with determinism.Determinism leads to everything unfolding in the only possible reality. Free will, on the other hand, in regard to conflicting value judgments is, in my view, rooted existentially in dasein.
Not that I believe in free will or rule it out, but saying it is rooted in dasein is utterly confused. Not that it's rooted in genetics or external forces. It is the freedom to not be influenced by any of these things.
Unless you meant that the belief in it is rooted in dasein. That' could be supported by decent arguement. But since you contrast it with determinism, that can't be what you meant.