Alright, let’s revisit something important I mentioned earlier: "Science isn’t actually in the business of proving concepts outright; it’s more about trying to disprove or challenge them. Theories stand as long as they withstand attempts to knock them down.” With that in mind, the burden of proof here isn’t on me to “prove” conservation laws—it’s on you to present evidence or a theoretical framework showing that free will could operate independently of these laws.godelian wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2024 1:54 pmI don't see what measurable inputs are supposed to lead to what measurable outputs in your experiment. What exactly are you measuring in your test?BigMike wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2024 1:47 pm Alright, let's get to the heart of the physics here. The argument rests on this: "Free will is an illusion because it is incompatible with the conservation laws of physics."
Now, if you'd like to counter that, your task is to show either (1) that free will doesn’t actually conflict with conservation laws, or (2) that the conservation laws themselves are somehow not universally applicable—or you might present another framework altogether that reconciles the two. If you can’t, then my challenge remains on the table.
Up till now, you have not demonstrated that your hypothesis can actually be tested.
Let’s clarify why conservation laws are relevant here. If free will exists as an uncaused force, we’d expect to see some measurable breach of conservation in brain activity—energy or momentum appearing from no physical origin. Since science consistently confirms conservation laws across experimental contexts, it’s the absence of observed violations that supports the deterministic view. In this case, science has done its job: conservation laws hold strong precisely because they withstand every test.
So, if you’re proposing free will as a force that bypasses these laws, the testable evidence is on your end to show it, especially if you’re claiming a need to “disprove” conservation here. That’s how the scientific method places the burden: it’s up to the one suggesting the exception to make the case.