Sure, but software/hardware was an analogy about how two different things can interact. It wasn't an argument about free will.
In my view: you, a free will, are the cause. So: there isn't an uncaused effect.How could one get an uncaused effect?
Sure, but software/hardware was an analogy about how two different things can interact. It wasn't an argument about free will.
In my view: you, a free will, are the cause. So: there isn't an uncaused effect.How could one get an uncaused effect?
I don't know.attofishpi wrote: ↑Fri Sep 20, 2024 12:25 pm I am not saying indeterminacy is the requirement either, just making an observation based on a hypothetical.
Are you of the opinion that free will does not exist?
Or it could mean just more randomness.If consciousness is not computable as Sir Roger P suggests, then there is NO determinism within it...which suggests something very fundamental at the QM level is happening...ergo, part of my rationale to David Boon (& David Boon)...diverging thoughts.
Your linked materials are metaphors for beginners and children. Why do you think we need to use hard drives lol.henry quirk wrote: ↑Fri Sep 20, 2024 1:29 pmTry again. Start by actually...
-reading what's in the linked material.
-reading all the permutations of Janoah's assertion.
So you're saying that an arrangement of physical matter, even a very complex arrangement, could not display these behaviors.Wetness is a material property of material.
Hope is not. Love is not. Hate is not. Intention is not.
Who is saying that thoughts, etc. are material??But, if you can show me how thought, emotion, identity, belief, conviction, etc. are material, I'm listening.
And you think that a free will breaks with the previous causes which brought about a particular state. Therefore, it is not caused by the current situation or state.In my view: you, a free will, are the cause. So: there isn't an uncaused effect.How could one get an uncaused effect?
Simple, plain, non-metaphorical, and clearly laying out why hardware and software are not the same.
Actually I'm quite allergic to people who don't understand that software (information) is just an abstraction we make. It shows how incompetent that person is in philosophy. It's even worse when IT people say it.henry quirk wrote: ↑Fri Sep 20, 2024 1:44 pmSimple, plain, non-metaphorical, and clearly laying out why hardware and software are not the same.
Now, I've wasted enough time on justifying a analogy.
I do not believe any amount of matter, in any configuration, can imagine or intend or fear. We do so we must be more than just matter.
I disagree.I'm saying that physical matter can have thoughts, etc.
Not on it's own, no.The brain is a physical object. It's doing the thinking in a person or animal.
Surely, your soul isn't doing the thinking? Why would it?
henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Mar 07, 2022 4:26 pmMan is a composite thing -- spirit & substance -- his mind (spirit) intermixed with his flesh (substance); he is both equally. You might say these are his higher and lower natures. His substance grants efficacy in the world and anchors and constrains his spirit, which grants identity, intention, etc.
Since animals display both intent and fear, then they must be more than matter ... yet you refer to animals as meat machines.I do not believe any amount of matter, in any configuration, can imagine or intend or fear. We do so we must be more than just matter.phyllo wrote: ↑Fri Sep 20, 2024 1:35 pm
So you're saying that an arrangement of physical matter, even a very complex arrangement, could not display these behaviors.
I think most, mebbe all, of what we see when it comes to animal displays of fear, intent, etc. is our anthropomorphizing them. We see what isn't there.
That's the key issue: there's no such thing as "a beginning that never began." You can see the contradiction even in the wording. If something that is contingent -- that is not itself eternal, that is -- "never began," then it wouldn't exist now. All things that are perishable have a beginning.Self-Lightening wrote: ↑Fri Sep 20, 2024 3:46 am I say the Big Bang is the beginning that never began, just as the Big Chill is the ending that will never end.
Again, you're mistaking what people knew at a given time, from what was true at that same time. The Earth was round before people had telescopes.Are you sure, though, that, throughout the entire known history of the world, people had microscopes?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Sep 19, 2024 1:20 pmI find that suggestion excessively implausible. A base element has never given even the slightest indication of consciousness, in the entire known history of the world. On what basis, then, would you attribute sentience to rocks or minerals? Only by pure imagination, but not on the basis of any facts, obviously.All those things may very well have mind.
I neither knew you had nor did I mention it. However, if you're imagining base elements have consciousness...well, that would explain the confusion. LSD and such have permanent, residual brain effects, sometimes even including unanticipated manifestations later in life. So thank you for that piece of information, I guess.Haven't used hallucinogens for about six years now, by the way.
I'm not speaking of what's "better" either. You'll look in vain for that word above. I'm talking about what's rational, what's entailed by things like claims of randomness.Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Fri Sep 20, 2024 6:26 amYou don't seem to know what we're talking about, because all of what you just said isn't it. Neither phyllo nor I, in those quotes you quoted, are speaking a word about what's better about anything.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Sep 19, 2024 11:30 pmYou shouldn't. There's nothing about being the pawn of random factors that is any better than being the pawn of factors we know. In both cases, we would just be pawns, still in what Weber called, "the iron cage" of predetermination. The only thing that would have changed is the name of our "jailor." But we would be no more free.Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Thu Sep 19, 2024 7:04 pm
I agree with all that. It's some kind of faux randomness he's talking about.