BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Apr 16, 2025 7:02 pm
You’ve just seen a flurry of passionate responses, sharp jabs, and philosophical counterpunches — and maybe you’re wondering what all this heat is really about.
It’s about this:
Do we actually choose who we are? Or are we the product of everything that came before us?
It seems pretty obvious that we had absolutely no choice when it came to the manifestation of our personal
"I Am-ness" which sits at the throne of our mind and consciousness and represents the
locus (or focal point) of our
sense of "selfness."
Furthermore, it is also obvious that from the very instant that the proverbial
"lights" came on in our minds at the moment of birth, the information storage medium that we call a
"brain" from which our minds
emerged,...
(which, other than containing operating "programs," so to speak, that work to control vital body processes such as "...breathing, heart rate, blood pressure, digestion, and even basic reflexes like swallowing and blinking..." — AI Overview)
...pretty much started out as almost being completely blank in terms of the memories derived from input from the external world.
And the point is that you, BigMike, are making the egregious error of insisting that
"who we are" is somehow dependent on the deterministic-like influences of the sum-total of the memories of our life experiences.
Sure, there's no denying the possibility that the veritable
"galaxy" of memories that surrounds our central consciousness (surrounds our "I Am-ness") is what greatly influences (determines) the decisions we make,...
...however,
that's not who we really are.
No, I suggest that
who we each "really" are, is that singularly unique, self-aware, free-willed
- "agent"/"I Am-ness"/"soul" - that was somehow awakened into existence at the moment of birth via what seems to be the process of "
Strong Emergence" from the human brain.
There's probably a better analogy,...
...but the point is that the accrued memories that seem to have a deterministic,
"cause and affect-like" influence on our decision-making processes are no more a literal part of
"who we really are" than that of some random gaming software is a literal part of what computer hard drives really are.
BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Apr 16, 2025 7:02 pm
This isn’t nihilism. This is clarity.
It doesn’t mean we abandon morality — it means we ground it.
It doesn’t mean we stop holding people accountable — it means we stop pretending they
authored themselves.
It doesn’t mean we shrug at injustice — it means we finally know how to fix it:
by changing causes, not blaming souls.
You're kidding us, right?
Your entire deterministic ("humans are soulless machines") schtick is nihilistic through-and-through, for what it ultimately implies is that life (in the long run) is meaningless, in that there is no long-term purpose for any of us as individuals.
You seem to have some kind of naïve and utopian-ish vision that if everyone simply adopts the philosophy of determinism, then we...
(including the Trumps, and the Putins, and the Kim Jong Uns of the world)
...are all going to join hands and sing John Lennon's song
"Imagine" (
"...and the world will be as one...").
Nonsense!!!
If anything, if the world's despotic pigs are convinced that our momentary "blips" of existence on this planet is
all there is to life, then why shouldn't they just go ahead and let their worst instincts be their M.O., and grab for as much wealth and power as they can get their greedy clutches on?
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