Right. All of my avoidance!Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Fri Feb 17, 2023 8:26 amAll of this avoidance tells me one thing: you have no idea what the alternative to determinism actually is. You haven't thought about it. You don't want to think about itiambiguous wrote: ↑Thu Feb 16, 2023 10:58 pmYo, gib!Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Wed Feb 15, 2023 8:36 pm
First of all, you can feel all of that inside. You can feel yourself thinking about ideas, considering them, and apparently "choosing" to type the words that in some way correspond to your thoughts.![]()
Like our emotions are "somehow" different from our thoughts when brainless matter "somehow" evolved into biological life "somehow" evolved in conscious life "somehow" evolved into self-conscious life.
Like you don't feel intense emotions in your dreams and then wake up thinking, "wow, I didn't really feel those emotions at all...it was just my brain creating them chemically and neurologically while I was actually sound asleep.
Oh, I see. Because you really, really, reallly, really believe that what you feel you feel autonomously...that makes it true.Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Wed Feb 15, 2023 8:36 pmScience can not prove that, because at the moment science doesn't have direct access to your thoughts. But you don't need science to prove it, because you've just experienced it internally. You can prove it to yourself.
In any event, let's keep it all up in the intellectual contraption clouds:
Note to Mary:Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Wed Feb 15, 2023 8:36 pmSo, knowing that, ask yourself the question: so what if it's determined or not? What in the world could adding randomness to that whole process possibly do for me? Would randomness make my mind somehow BETTER at processing information and considering the ideas?
You tell me. What you feel this time.
You keep going on circles with everyone because you aren't engaging honestly. You'll keep going in circles.
Though, sure, if I do keep going around and around in circles, that pertains largely to the profound mystery embedded in human consciousness itself in connecting the dots between mind and matter when Mary does ponder her moral responsibility in aborting Jane.
Whereas, in my view, your own "up in intellectual clouds" approach to all of this revolves more around your own rendition of this:
"Sure, it works in practice, but does it work in theory?"
Given this: click.