BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 am
iambiguous, you continue to evade the central issue with an endless spiral of rhetorical deflection. Instead of engaging with the core problem—that free will has no mechanism within physical laws—you retreat into philosophical hand-waving about how anyone can "really know" anything, while paradoxically making definitive claims about the limits of human knowledge. You can’t have it both ways.
The core problem? We clearly see that differently. From my own inherently problematic frame of mind what I continue to do is to acknowledge that my own assessment here is ultimately stymied by all that I do not know about the human brain, the human condition or an understanding of existence itself. Whereas, in my view, you sweep those parts under the rug as though they were a mere trivial pursuit.
On the other hand, in my view, discussions here pertaining to meaning and morality and metaphysics are the ones that generate the most heat.
Why is that?
Also, I make that crucial distinction between all of the things mere mortals seemingly can grasp objectively out in the either/or world...mathematics, natural laws, the rules of logic, and all the things that precipitate moral and political conflagrations in the is/ought world.
And what I do here by and large is to expose what I believe is an attempt on your part to defend determinism. But only sort of. You are determined to post here just like all the rest of us mere mortals in a No God world. Assuming of course it is a No God world.
Still, it seems to me "here and now" you have this need to assure us that you really do grasp the human brain, the human condition, existence itself such that your posts will always be deemed by you to be, what, the wisest?
Why is that?
Well, either because, like all the rest of us, you are no less embedded in the only possible reality there can ever be, or "somehow" nature always comes around here to align itself with whatever you think and feel.
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 amYou claim I am asserting my position as "the definitive argument," but that’s a misrepresentation. I am asserting that determinism aligns with every confirmed law of physics, while free will, as traditionally conceived, contradicts them outright.
That's not the point, however, the hardcore determinsists note. Instead, the crucial factor here revolves around the assumption they make that everything we think, feel, intuit, say and do we were never able to freely opt not to.
Philosophers and scientists who believe that the universe is deterministic and that determinism is incompatible with free will are called “hard” determinists. Since moral responsibility seems to require free will, hard determinism implies that people are not morally responsible for their actions. britannica
And just because something is "tradionally conceived" doesn't mean that too is not but another necessary component of the only possible universe.
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 amThat’s not an opinion; that’s an empirical distinction. And your continued invocation of “The Gap and Rummy’s Rule” does nothing to challenge that. It’s an appeal to mystery, a distraction. The unknown does not undo the known.
Click. Again, we'll have to just agree to disagree for now.
Imagine though if every scientist accepted that in regard to their own field. What they claim to believe "here and now" really, really does reflect what scientists a thousand years from now will confirm?
Of course, the beauty of thinking like you do is that you will no doubt go to the grave [like the rest of us] believing certain things are true long before science has actually established that, in fact, they either are or are not.
Instead, in my view, for those of your ilk what is by far most important is that you have comvinced yourself you really are spot on in regard to a metaphysical quandary that has been determinism for thousands of years now.
In fact, I was reading something a few days ago in which it was speculated that a thousand years from now scientists will think of us then the way we think of bugs today.
Just out of curiosity, do you embrace a similar certitude regarding meaning and morality, as well?
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 amYou ask if I was "free" to anchor my reasoning in established physical laws. The question itself betrays a misunderstanding. My reasoning, like yours, is causally determined by experience, evidence, and logical necessity.
Yet over and again, you seem equally determined to convince us -- or to convince yourself? -- that your own set of assumptions here are the most rational. And what I'm still muddled regarding is the part where in posting here nature gives way to nurture?
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 amThat doesn’t make it meaningless—it makes it explainable. Determinism does not deny decision-making or reasoning; it explains how and why decisions arise.
Back to this then...
...imagine the universe had locations where free will prevailed and locations where determinsm prevailed. Those in the free will sector visit Earth in a spaceship from time to time. They gaze down at us in the determined sector. They see us acting, they see others reacting to that, they see us reacting to their reations. But they know that both the actions and reactions observed are wholly programmed by our brains. Basically, they see us interacting the way we see ants interacting...all in sync with brains in sync with the laws of matter.
They note that decisions are made, behaviors are chosen, interactions unfold. But what does that actually mean if it all unfolds in an entirety autonomic manner?
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 amYour belief that determinism means "we can’t claim one argument is better than another" is a misfire. If an argument is better supported by evidence, then by definition, it is better. Not because it was "freely chosen," but because it aligns more accurately with reality.
Which, of course, is basically what the Libertarians among us will argue.
Sure, we can claim that our evidence and our definitions and our deductions reflect the optimal assessment here. But how exactly do we go about demonstrating this in such a way that no one can doubt this is all still reconcilable with determinism.
I'm not saying it's not, only that the scientific community as a whole does not seem ready to confirm definitively that it is.
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 amYou repeatedly ask whether my position is widely accepted by brain scientists. And I’ll repeat:
I don’t need scientists to "confirm" determinism. I need you (or anyone) to falsify it. Conservation laws and causality are the bedrock of physics. The burden is not on me to prove they apply to the brain—it’s on you (or anyone) to show where they don’t. And no one has.
Come on, Mike, at least accept the possibility that your own assessment here may well be "beyond your control". As for falsification, given a universe as utterly immense and as staggeringly vast and mysterious as our own is -- and assuming there is no multiverse -- what would it mean to falsify something like this. Again, it seems to me, you may as well set out to falsify God's existence.
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 amYou say that when you Google "science and free will," you find debates. Of course you do—philosophers and some scientists still speculate about it. But speculation is not evidence.
Unless, perhaps, you are confusing your own flagrant assertions here with the sort of evidence that, if confirmed, would be the talk of the entire scientific community. To actually establish an unequivocal understanding of the human brain here?!!
The fact that some argue for free will doesn’t mean they’ve provided a mechanism for it.
On the contrary, millions upon millions upon millions around the globe will note that the "mechanism" for human autonomy is God. At least until someone is able to falsify His existence.
So, what is the mechanism persuading you to suggest that even though we are all programmed by nature to both post and react to posts here, you "somehow" still manage to always come out on top in explaining the human brain
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 amThe question isn’t "Are there people who still believe in free will?" The question is "Has anyone demonstrated a causal mechanism for it?" The answer remains no.
Or the question might be, "because no one has demonstrated a causal mechanism for free will [yet], does that confirm everything that Mike argues here?"
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 amAs for emotions, art, and subjective experience—you keep implying that determinism reduces them to something lesser. No, determinism explains them. Just as it explains every other physical process.
No, given determinism as some understand it, there are no greater or lesser assessments here. There are only the assessments our brains have compelled us to champion "here and now". Assessments that ontologically are "beyond our control."
Do I understand it as such? Well, sometimes. Other times however it's my own rendition of "I just know it!"
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 amYou find a piece of music moving? That’s not a mystery; it’s a function of sensory processing, pattern recognition, cultural association, and memory. It’s not "less real" because it’s caused—it’s
more comprehensible because it’s caused.
Okay, John loves the blues, Jane loves folk, Bill loves jazz, Mary loves classical, Brian loves rap, iambiguous loves new wave. So, given your own understanding of determinism, is whatever caused this such that there was always the possibility of this being entirely different? Why? Becasue "somehow" at least some measure of autonomy allows us to make these personal, subjective decisions "on our own"?
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 30, 2025 12:28 amAnd finally, you end with a dodge, saying your point isn’t to make a valid argument but to "explore the quandary." No, your point is to endlessly evade the obvious. If determinism is flawed, provide evidence that conservation laws and causality do not govern neuronal activity. Until then, skepticism is just empty hand-waving.
See how this works for you? You were determined to post this given that your brain is no less entirely in sync with the laws of matter, but "somehow" your own brain is able avoid evading the obvious while those here who do not share your own definitions and deductions are themselves responsible for
not just accepting your assumptions.