henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 12, 2025 10:56 pm
BigMike wrote: ↑Sat Apr 12, 2025 10:31 pm
I like how you go for the deleted, overkill, post and not the meaty, on-point, one...
henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 12, 2025 10:17 pm
BigMike wrote: ↑Sat Apr 12, 2025 9:39 pm
You keep quoting that same passage as if it’s a mic drop
Yes sir, I do cuz it
is. If this...
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Nov 29, 2024 6:06 pmHere’s the brutal truth: your brain is a deterministic machine, operating under the same unyielding physical laws as a rock rolling downhill. You don’t control your thoughts, your desires, or your decisions. You are
driven by a cascade of external inputs, biological processes, and environmental stimuli—all of which you neither initiated nor directed.
...is true, then all your fine thoughts about morality, compassion, justice, humaneness, etc. are invalid, null & void. Hell, those thoughts aren't even
yours. Those thoughts are just the inevitable result of amoral, empty, meaningless, blind forces working thru you or pullin' your strings.
And you know this. That's why you make no attempt to reconcile this...
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Nov 29, 2024 6:06 pmHere’s the brutal truth: your brain is a deterministic machine, operating under the same unyielding physical laws as a rock rolling downhill. You don’t control your thoughts, your desires, or your decisions. You are
driven by a cascade of external inputs, biological processes, and environmental stimuli—all of which you neither initiated nor directed.
...with those fine thoughts. You know the gap cannot be bridged. You can't have it both ways Mike. If you want morality, compassion, justice, humaneness, etc. you can only have them as a
free will (as I defined it just up-thread). None of
that is for the
meat machine you believe yourself to be, that you'd reduce us all to existing (not living) as.
Gosh, but you're
obvious.
Henry,
You're stuck because you think memory, learning, pattern recognition, and prediction are somehow separate from morality, compassion, justice, and meaning. They're not. They
are the substrate. And you’re not seeing that because you haven’t made peace with what a brain actually is.
You think: “If it’s all just a machine reacting, then nothing means anything.” But that’s just because you haven't understood what a learning machine
does.
A deterministic system with memory and feedback
learns. It stores patterns. It recognizes suffering—its own and others’. It forms models, makes predictions, and adjusts behavior accordingly. That's where morality begins—not from a ghost in the machine, but from the
structure of the machine. Empathy, care, remorse, hope—all of these emerge from feedback loops shaped by experience, not magic.
Think of it this way: A stone doesn’t learn. A rock rolling downhill doesn’t remember. But your brain—your beautifully deterministic brain—does. It models itself, the world, and other people. And over time, it builds moral intuitions. Not because it's free—but because it’s plastic, causal, and connected.
What you keep calling a “gap” is just your inability to accept that
caused things can be meaningful. That love isn’t fake just because it emerges from experience. That responsibility isn’t meaningless just because it has a backstory.
You want a metaphysical source for your values. I’m telling you:
you don’t need one.
All you need is a brain that remembers.
That learns.
That feels.
And that adapts to patterns in ways that promote well-being—not because it’s commanded to, but because it evolved to.
That’s not an empty world. That’s a
real one.
If you're still asking "Where does compassion come from in a deterministic world?" the answer is simple:
from memory, learning, and the capacity to simulate the pain of others as if it were your own.
No ghost required. Just a nervous system.
A beautiful, messy, miraculous product of billions of years of cause and effect.