Because you generally know very little about science, and never shown any signs that you know anything about QM. If you did, you would know for example that quantum-indeterminacy is exactly a feature of QM that can't account for free will.attofishpi wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 5:18 amWell, that's odd.Atla wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:40 amYou know nothing about the topic so it can't really be part of your angle.attofishpi wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 3:14 am
Yes, apparently since the Big Bang to now this ridiculously placed tilde--> ~ was always going to happen.
Well, quantum-indeterminacy where consciousness is concerned is part of my angle, that we of conscious minds do have free-will and this tilde--> ..was never going to happen. (not since the Big Bang determined universe, but because I decided not to put one there)
I had no idea you know me better than I know me. From whence are you drawing the conclusion that I know nothing about the topic?
Free will, freedom from what?
Re: Free will, freedom from what?
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Self-Lightening
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Re: Free will, freedom from what?
Still with the false dualism... An argument, like any meme, only exists physically: for example, on paper, or on a computer, or yes, in a brain.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:29 amNo, an "argument," by definition, is not a physical thing, but rather a conceptual abstraction. Can you measure an "argument"? Can you put it in a beaker? Can you pinch it in Vernier calipers, or dissect it? It's not part of the physical world, but belongs to mental phenomena. And we have no "natural laws" that predictably describe its operation. Unless somebody "believes" it, and acts on it into the physical world, it's inert.Self-Lightening wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 3:44 amFalse dualism: arguments and the effect they have on the brain are always in complete conformity with "natural laws" (the laws of physics).Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Sep 17, 2024 5:21 pmBut let me ask you this, instead: if we, to whom you are arguing, have no free will, no volition, then how do you expect us to change our minds? According to your theory, the only reason we think what we think, at any given time, is because "natural law" made us think what we think. So we have no ability to choose our beliefs, and the quality of your arguments has no impact on whether we believe X or Y. Only "natural laws" determine that, not quality of argument.
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Re: Free will, freedom from what?
I am absolutely certain you have very little idea about QM and how it ties in with consciousness.Atla wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 5:39 amBecause you generally know very little about science, and never shown any signs that you know anything about QM. If you did, you would know for example that quantum-indeterminacy is exactly a feature of QM that can't account for free will.attofishpi wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 5:18 amWell, that's odd.
I had no idea you know me better than I know me. From whence are you drawing the conclusion that I know nothing about the topic?
Go ahead, explain how quantum-indeterminacy has NO role to play to support conscious minds having free will.
Re: Free will, freedom from what?
I saw some of the conversation but I didn't really read it, so I don't know what his argument was. I don't know how much free will we have, I'm afraid.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 2:05 amOh. You missed the earlier conversation, then. For some reason I can't figure out, Janoah thinks that the existence of gravity proves that free will doesn't exist. At the same time, he claims that Determinism is "absurd."Harbal wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 12:05 amI have no idea. I was making a point about gravity, not free will.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Sep 17, 2024 11:08 pm
But what have physical laws got to do with free will?![]()
I've been trying to make sense out of all that, but I really don't think I can.
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Re: Free will, freedom from what?
People here, for example. In past conversations about Determinism, those are explanations others have offered to me. Have you not heard such things?Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:49 amWho talks about relativity like this? Who are these "people"?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:30 amThey're both explanations people think might account for volition, but neither does.Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:09 am ...you just randomly start talking about randomness in a conversation about relativity.
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Re: Free will, freedom from what?
It's not false. Here, you make a dualistic explanation as well. "Paper" is not "argument." "Paper" is composed of wood. An argument is composed of meaning, and meaning can only be generated or understood by "mind," and "mind" isn't physical.Self-Lightening wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 5:45 amStill with the false dualism... An argument, like any meme, only exists physically: for example, on paper, or on a computer, or yes, in a brain.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:29 amNo, an "argument," by definition, is not a physical thing, but rather a conceptual abstraction. Can you measure an "argument"? Can you put it in a beaker? Can you pinch it in Vernier calipers, or dissect it? It's not part of the physical world, but belongs to mental phenomena. And we have no "natural laws" that predictably describe its operation. Unless somebody "believes" it, and acts on it into the physical world, it's inert.Self-Lightening wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 3:44 am
False dualism: arguments and the effect they have on the brain are always in complete conformity with "natural laws" (the laws of physics).
"Brain" is, just as "paper" is. But "mind" is the perceiving entity, whereas "brain" is only meat.
This is an old philosophical point, and well-known. If you want to establish what is meant by each, check out T. Nagel's "Mind and Cosmos," for example.
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Flannel Jesus
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Re: Free will, freedom from what?
I have never once heard people talk about relativity that way, no. Quantum mechanics yes, but not relativity. It would be a remarkable kind of absurdity to do that, and I'm finding it hard to believe anybody has.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 12:41 pmPeople here, for example. In past conversations about Determinism, those are explanations others have offered to me. Have you not heard such things?Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:49 amWho talks about relativity like this? Who are these "people"?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:30 am
They're both explanations people think might account for volition, but neither does.
That's why I was, and still am, convinced you've mixed up relativity and qm.
Re: Free will, freedom from what?
Self-Lightening wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 5:45 amStill with the false dualism... An argument, like any meme, only exists physically: for example, on paper, or on a computer, or yes, in a brain.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:29 amNo, an "argument," by definition, is not a physical thing, but rather a conceptual abstraction. Can you measure an "argument"? Can you put it in a beaker? Can you pinch it in Vernier calipers, or dissect it? It's not part of the physical world, but belongs to mental phenomena. And we have no "natural laws" that predictably describe its operation. Unless somebody "believes" it, and acts on it into the physical world, it's inert.Self-Lightening wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 3:44 am
False dualism: arguments and the effect they have on the brain are always in complete conformity with "natural laws" (the laws of physics).
What my definition of a false dualism is... I'm not gonna lie when I tell you/me the truth, cos, even a lie is the truth.
I spoke to my brain once, I asked it how it is able to brain out the world to look as though the inside is on the outside. I waited patiently, but it just ignored me.
I'm guessing my brain must have thought about it for some time, thinking to itself inside / outside / where is that!
Where am I actually located.
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Re: Free will, freedom from what?
I merely made my explanation too terse and hasty, and thus jumbled my wording a little. But I assure you, there is some difference, and I know the difference. They are two distinct proposed objections to criticisms of Determinism. If you have not encountered both, I believe you. But I have, so I don't know what more to say about that.Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 12:57 pmI have never once heard people talk about relativity that way, no. Quantum mechanics yes, but not relativity. It would be a remarkable kind of absurdity to do that, and I'm finding it hard to believe anybody has.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 12:41 pmPeople here, for example. In past conversations about Determinism, those are explanations others have offered to me. Have you not heard such things?Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:49 am
Who talks about relativity like this? Who are these "people"?
That's why I was, and still am, convinced you've mixed up relativity and qm.
However, if that's really what you want to discuss, then we should sort out what you meant by "Relativity" before we commence.
As you may know, there is "relativity," the scientific theory, and "Relativism," the position on morals or epistemology. Which one did you mean to allude to? You mention Einstein, which would suggest it was "relativity." And if I recall aright, you said "relativity" explicitly. But that would not make sense in view of the present topic, which has to do with human beings and cognition, rather than physics...
So I think you must have meant "Relativism," but then Einstein wouldn't be directly involved...so maybe you can clear that up for me, as well.
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Flannel Jesus
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Re: Free will, freedom from what?
I was having a conversation with another poster when you jumped in. That poster was absolutely talking about relativity as in physics, as in Einstein. Whether you think it makes sense or not, that's what he was talking about, that's what I've been talking about.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 1:35 pmBut that would not make sense in view of the present topic
Re: Free will, freedom from what?
"absolutely certain"attofishpi wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 5:59 amI am absolutely certain you have very little idea about QM and how it ties in with consciousness.Atla wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 5:39 amBecause you generally know very little about science, and never shown any signs that you know anything about QM. If you did, you would know for example that quantum-indeterminacy is exactly a feature of QM that can't account for free will.attofishpi wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 5:18 am
Well, that's odd.
I had no idea you know me better than I know me. From whence are you drawing the conclusion that I know nothing about the topic?
And you wonder why we don't take you seriously.
Because by itself it's just predictably random, and free will can't be based on randomness.Go ahead, explain how quantum-indeterminacy has NO role to play to support conscious minds having free will.
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Re: Free will, freedom from what?
Okay, that's fine. But maybe you can connect the dots for me. What has physics got to do with freedom?Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 1:42 pmI was having a conversation with another poster when you jumped in. That poster was absolutely talking about relativity as in physics, as in Einstein. Whether you think it makes sense or not, that's what he was talking about, that's what I've been talking about.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 1:35 pmBut that would not make sense in view of the present topic
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Flannel Jesus
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Re: Free will, freedom from what?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 2:04 pmOkay, that's fine. But maybe you can connect the dots for me. What has physics got to do with freedom?Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 1:42 pmI was having a conversation with another poster when you jumped in. That poster was absolutely talking about relativity as in physics, as in Einstein. Whether you think it makes sense or not, that's what he was talking about, that's what I've been talking about.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 1:35 pmBut that would not make sense in view of the present topic
Believe it or not, I didn't say it did. All I said to op was, relativity does not rule out determinism. Which is true, it doesn't, and Einstein was himself a determinist.
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Re: Free will, freedom from what?
Oh no!! Please don't tell me there's a "WE"..Atla wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 1:45 pm"absolutely certain"attofishpi wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 5:59 amI am absolutely certain you have very little idea about QM and how it ties in with consciousness.
And you wonder why we don't take you seriously.
The "absolute certainty" I have about you and your credentials on the topic is because most physicists would admit the same (u arrogant X)
Shit effort.Atla wrote:Because by itself it's just predictably random, and free will can't be based on randomness.atto wrote:Go ahead, explain how quantum-indeterminacy has NO role to play to support conscious minds having free will.
So tomorrow I'll explain how you should never have insisted so arrogantly that I "..know very little about science".
I can only assume you are making such a claim based on my insistence that I KNOW God exists - that somehow to your meagre, short of insight mind this means then I cannot under_stand science.
Re: Free will, freedom from what?
You miss the point about the meme thingy. Non-physical things do not exist for the physical body. The physical has no conception of it's own conception, the body does not know body. The body only exists as a physical image, it has no existence except in a photographic image. Bodies never chose to be born. No body ever chooses to be born, all births are concept-less free beings. Knowledge is an apparent by-product of synthetic language, which is simply sound heard as words.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 12:45 pmIt's not false. Here, you make a dualistic explanation as well. "Paper" is not "argument." "Paper" is composed of wood. An argument is composed of meaning, and meaning can only be generated or understood by "mind," and "mind" isn't physical.Self-Lightening wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 5:45 amStill with the false dualism... An argument, like any meme, only exists physically: for example, on paper, or on a computer, or yes, in a brain.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:29 am
No, an "argument," by definition, is not a physical thing, but rather a conceptual abstraction. Can you measure an "argument"? Can you put it in a beaker? Can you pinch it in Vernier calipers, or dissect it? It's not part of the physical world, but belongs to mental phenomena. And we have no "natural laws" that predictably describe its operation. Unless somebody "believes" it, and acts on it into the physical world, it's inert.
"Brain" is, just as "paper" is. But "mind" is the perceiving entity, whereas "brain" is only meat.
This is an old philosophical point, and well-known. If you want to establish what is meant by each, check out T. Nagel's "Mind and Cosmos," for example.
It's more along the lines of 'the whole universe choosing' to be born.. But being rather than choosing. The universe is more of an apparent twoniverse which in effect, seems like a universe. One appearing as two, which makes it seem to One as if there is two, with the 'second' seemingly being - a, universe. Only therein does there seem to be choice, a chooser and possibly other choosers.