First of all, my point is that neither scientists nor philosophers have [to the best of my current knowledge] been able to determine if human beings either have or do not have free will. Instead, if you want that sort of certainty, it's any number of the theologians among us who can provide it. Free will? Of course: a God, the God, my God installed that in my very soul.
Only, I still have no understanding of how God and religion function for you here in this regard. Do you believe that you have a God-given soul? Is God the font you fall back on in regard to autonomy?
phyllo wrote: ↑Sat Jun 28, 2025 7:55 pm"Brain science hasn't found any mechanism for libertarian free-will. Therefore, determinism is how things work according to the science."
Human beings don't have libertarian free-will.
Isn't that the scientific consensus at this point? What do you need a 'link' to?
Of course, we'll have to run this by the Libertarians first, won't we? Then the Objectivists? They can come in here and argue for Libertarian free will [and even "metaphysical morality"] and those of your ilk can go about accumulating their mistakes?
How about this...
You, Atla and FJ explore what each other gets right or wrong regarding compatibilism. Or do all of you believe exactly the same thing about it? No mistakes at all between you?
Look, in regard to meaning, morality and metaphysics, have you managed to convince yourself that science and philosophy are, what, interchangeable...? And, sure, they just may well be.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sat Jun 28, 2025 7:55 pmYou might as well say that chemistry and history are interchangeable. It's just as silly. Sure, you can use chemistry to date artifacts, for example, but the two are completely different disciplines and are in no way "interchangeable". Philosophy and science deal with different types of knowledge and use different tools for that reason.
Please. What chemists conclude about the brain revolves around the scientific method.
As for historians -- click -- they might actually agree regarding historical facts, but where is the consensus regarding what those facts convey in regard to rational or irrational value judgments?
How are your own value judgments
not derived existentially from dasein?
On the other hand, in regard to the functioning human brain, what exactly is the equivalent of the scientific method among philosophers in exploring this?
phyllo wrote: ↑Sat Jun 28, 2025 7:55 pmYou don't know the methodology that philosophers use??? How many decades have you been hanging around on philosophy forums? And you studied some philosophy in a university?
Right. If you google "philosophy and free will" you get this:
https://www.google.com/search?q=philoso ... s-wiz-serp
So, using the tools at their disposal, what
has the philosophical community definitively concluded regarding those who claim that compatibilism and determinism are, well, compatible.
Please cite a few examples regarding your own behavior. Like, say, posting here?
The part where, over and again, some will argue that if someone puts a gun to your head and commands, "post or you die", that's an "external" factor. But they ignore the possibility that someone puts a gun to your head only because he or she was never able not to do this either.
And while I would never deny that The Gap, Rummy's Rule and the Benjamin Button Syndrome may well be applicable ...
phyllo wrote: ↑Sat Jun 28, 2025 7:55 pm"May well be"???
Yeah, as opposed to "this is what I believe about compatibilism and that settles it".
phyllo wrote: ↑Sat Jun 28, 2025 7:55 pmEverybody knows that there are gaps and limits to human knowledge.
That's why your constant references to The Gap and Rummy's Rules are received with yawns of boredom and indifference.
Again, from my frame of mind "here and now", that is nothing short of...ridiculous? preposterous? harebrained? risible? On the other hand, I have no capacity -- scientific, philosophical, theological -- to actually demonstrate it. So, sure, it might well be smack dab in the bullseye philosophically. And, if it is, congratulations. Maybe at the next APA convention, this will be confirmed as, indeed, the One True Path to grasping compatibilism.
As for the yawns, it's about what I'd expect from the objectivists. They put all of their eggs in one or another One True Path basket. And I know what's involved here because I've had any number of baskets upended myself.
Moral responsibility isn't a brain science problem, its a philosophy or social science problem. It's a problem of how we want social interactions to work.
So, here you are proposing, what, that what we want in regard to social interactions, we want of our own volition? Why? Because you [and others] "just know" this is true? On the other hand, you can't actually link us to anything definitive given the philosophical equivalent of the scientific method to demonstrate it.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sat Jun 28, 2025 7:55 pmHow you manage to think that this is an appropriate response to what I wrote, boggles the mind.
No more so than Jane's mind is boggled when you tell her the only reason she is among us at all is because her Mom's friend [of her own volition] convinced her not to have the abortion. Though if Mom did abort her as a manifestation of the only possible reality, she is still morally responsible.
Then this part:
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/t/back- ... lity/30639
All I can then do is ask others how their own moral and metaphysical philosophies unfolded over the course of their life, such that they arrived at their convictions here in a completely different way.