Come on, if everything that unfolds in your head unfolds only because the human brain is chenically and neurologically in sync with the laws of matter, do you think it matters to nature whether you are sound asleep or wide awake?phyllo wrote: ↑Thu Mar 09, 2023 11:46 amDreams only happen in your head.iambiguous wrote: ↑Thu Mar 09, 2023 3:52 amTwo nights ago, you had a dream where you won an event and got all that comes from winning it.
Last night you had the same dream where you lost the event and got none of it.
So, here, what's the difference between winning and losing?
Though, sure, some will insist when the wide-awake brain makes you a winner or a loser that is...different.
Reality happens outside your head as well. There are tangible results and not just for you.
Again, I'm not arguing that there isn't a difference -- God or No God -- only that scientists, philosophers and theologians have yet to pin that down unequivocally.
Though, sure, I'll continue to tune in to Nova and the Science Channel [compelled or not] waiting for the segment that finally pins it down.
It certainly seems to be. But then everything that seems to be may well be embedded in the psychological illusion of free will.
And there is still the part where flannel jesus dreams of tormenting me only to wake up and realize that it was all literally just in his head.
And the part where given any number of brain afflictions we find ourselves doing things on automatic pilot that we would never have freely chosen to do "in our right minds". Mind and matter can become nothing short of, well, mind-boggling.
Again, that's the argument that does up the ante. Or you can ask, "if the Holocaust could never have not happened are the Nazis really morally responsible for pursuing it, for acting on it, for killing millions and millions? And if you say they are, is that just one more example of the only possible world unfolding in the only possible way?"
Of course they are the same thing if you were never able to freely opt to conclude otherwise.
And I always get back around to moral responsibility, don't I? After all, in regard to the age-old free will/determinism/compatibilism debate [philosophical or otherwise], what aspect of human interactions can possibly be more important?