compatibilism
Re: compatibilism
What does BM have to do with it?
- henry quirk
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Re: compatibilism
Next.
- henry quirk
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Re: compatibilism
I do not want you to explain how you are free will as opposed to having free will. However, I find it puzzling that you have not progressed beyond your meat machine discourse. Is this your concluding point? If it is, then simply cease.henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Sep 01, 2022 1:34 pmMore generally: I have no interest in talkin' about my views (especially when so much about the current topic hasn't been resolved).You needn't worry, BM: I have no interest in talkin' about my views with you.
Re: compatibilism
There are two types of decisions, free and determined.
- henry quirk
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Re: compatibilism
As you & phyllo have nuthin': I guess I will.Is this your concluding point? If it is, then simply cease.
Re: compatibilism
Thankshenry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Sep 01, 2022 2:35 pmAs you & phyllo have nuthin': I guess I will.Is this your concluding point? If it is, then simply cease.
- iambiguous
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Re: compatibilism
Note to others:
Over and again, I'll admit that when it comes to resolving this age-old conundrum, your own well-informed or wild-ass guess is as good as mine.
And that certainly includes phyllo.
But -- click -- in regard to Mary aborting Jane what on earth is the point he is trying to make here?
How do we finally pin down if any comparison that we do make here is in fact made of our own volition or is in fact the only possible comparison that our material brains compel us to make?
And, if Mary is able to opt for or against aborting Jane -- the "click" assumption -- how is that choice not rooted existentially in dasein?
Thus, even if we do possess free will, it would seem that in a No God world it is reasonable to argue that abortion as a moral issue is but an existential, subjective/intersubjective manifestation of the life that we live out in a particular world historically, culturally and personally, and not something that philosophers/ethicists/political scientists etc., can pin down ontologically or teleologically.
Re: compatibilism
What does volition have to do with correct reasoning and logic?How do we finally pin down if any comparison that we do make here is in fact made of our own volition or is in fact the only possible comparison that our material brains compel us to make?
Re: compatibilism
- iambiguous
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Re: compatibilism
Note to others:henry quirk wrote: ↑Wed Aug 31, 2022 9:29 pmA wordy way of sayin' Mary, Spittin' Guy, and me had no choice in abortin', spittin', or fulminatin'.But I'm not saying that Mary makes no choices in a wholly determined universe. I'm broaching the surreal assumption that any choices that she or any of us make [including buying and selling bazookas and typing and reading these words] were "somehow" inherently/necessarily embedded in the laws of matter "somehow" evolving into conscious human brains. To even speak of it is fraught with all manner of equally surreal explanations.
You can't have it both ways, moron: if we're not free wills, then we're meat machines.
With this fulminating fanatic objectivist -- "my" take on him -- I always come back to two points that -- click -- he ever and always avoids responding to:
And...All of this going back to how the matter we call the human brain was "somehow" able to acquire autonomy when non-living matter "somehow" became living matter "somehow" became conscious matter "somehow" became self-conscious matter.
Then those here who actually believe that what they believe about all of this reflects, what, the ontological truth about the human condition itself?
Then those who are compelled in turn to insist on a teleological component as well. Usually in the form of one or another God.
Meanwhile, philosophers and scientists and theologians have been grappling with this profound mystery now for thousands of years.
Either in the only possible reality in the only possible world or of their own volition.
The rest is just him becoming Mr. Snippet. And that's just another way of becoming Mr. Wiggle, Wiggle, Wiggle.On the other hand, he does admit that in the past he has been wrong about things like this. So, sure, by his own admission, he may well be wrong about this too.
If, of course, you are in possession of the autonomy needed to agree or disagree "on your own" with me here.
Though even that is but an existential manifestation of dasein.
- iambiguous
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Re: compatibilism
Like he has any real choice here that is not but the psychological illusion of free will.
Note to nature:
What say you?