phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 3:12 pm
Again [click]: my reasoning is not the same as your own here. And only when it gets considerably closer to it, I suspect, will it be deemed reasoning at all.
This is the excuse you use so that you don't have to do the 'tedious' and 'dangerous' work of defending your reasoning.
Back to the part where you are able to demonstrate...scientifically, philosophically, empirically, experientially...that I am in fact able to freely opt to think other than as I do "here and now"? To post otherwise?
How about explaining how and why your own assessment of all this does come considerably closer to the way things really are.
As for how this revolves around my not doing the "tedious" and "dangerous" work of defending my reasoning, choose a particular context and we can explore this more in depth.
Click, say.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 3:12 pmDifferent reasoning, no common ground, no point in going into it. Done.
Of course, that can be noted regarding any number of quandaries that philosophers come upon pertaining to the Big Questions. Instead, what often boggles my mind is how there are actually those here who are convinced that their very own One True Path to Enlightenment -- God or No God -- allows them to scoff at others here who don't share their own dogmatic point of view.
Again: tell that to Jane. Her very existence depends on the assumption [yes, my own] that only in a world where Mom was in fact able to choose to either abort or not abort her, is that even possible.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 3:12 pm"Assumption" being the critical word.
You have an assumption and it doesn't have to be justified or explained. You just have it and that's it.
But with the assumption that we live in a free will world, it is possible for Jane to be among us. With the assumption that Mary was never able not to abort her, it was not. Instead, the discussion often shifts to the part where particular compatibilists seem to acknowledge that while the abortion was determined -- fated? destined? -- Mary is still morally responsible for it.
What, they tell you that they believe in free will? Okay, next time ask some them to provide you with all the evidence they have accumulated such that in utilizing the scientific method they are able to explain step by step how and why their own brain is able to function autonomously.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 3:12 pmI don't ask them for evidence or for them to utilize the "scientific method"All I ask is for them to show their reasoning.
How does pursuing the scientific method not include reasoning?
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 3:12 pmA cat is an animal but an animal is not a cat.
You lose me here. I'm not sure what your point is. Cats and all other animals that are not human beings are moot here because no other animal even comes close to exploring and encompassing all of this philosophically.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 3:12 pmThe scientific method may be reasoning but it's not the only reasoning available.
That's true of course. Which -- click -- always brings me back around to this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_r ... traditions
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_p ... ideologies
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_philosophies
In other words, there are any number of [at times] profoundly conflicting assumptions proposed here regarding determinism...and lots and lots of other controversies pertaining to human social, political and economic interactions.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 3:12 pmThis is a public forum. Most of the people here have no experience with the scientific method. Why would I demand that they use the scientific method exclusively to show their reasoning about determinism and free-will?
I'm asking them explain using the methods that they understand.
It's less a question of demanding that they use it, and more an assumption [another one] that ultimately those who do use other methods will have to eventually bring their conclusions
to the brain scientists.
On the other hand, there are those who insist the only "method" anyone really needs in order to acquire free will is to have faith in God. I thought that once included you but you won't go there.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 3:12 pmI doubt that the scientific method can even be used to get a result about determinism/free-will. What kind of experiment could be constructed? It's not like you can set up two petri dishes, one with determinism and the other with free-will and observe the results. But that's another story.
I suspect that it might be the most important of all methods.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 3:12 pmSo, you admit that you are unable to reason and to use logic.
Okay, let's leave it at that.
No, I acknowledge that reason and logic used by anyone here is still no less subsumed in The Gap and in Donald Rumsfeld's conjecture regarding the things we don't even know that we don't even know yet about the human brain.
Note to others:
Is that what I am admitting to here?
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 3:12 pmWell you wrote this : "I can't even demonstrate ..."
and now this : "I'm not claiming that my own reasoning here is correct."
So you must be admitting that you can't make a logical argument to support your position.
Look, if that's what you need to believe about me...?