Man is a "meat machine" that has feelings and reason. Other "meat machines" have feelings but not the reasoning ability that men have.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 25, 2023 7:57 pm Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?
The following applies if man is a free will...
henry quirk wrote: ↑Fri Oct 14, 2022 1:29 am The free willist believes he is accountable for what he does. The buck stops with him (no matter his circumstance or his apparent lack of say-so in a circumstance). At his best he's just; at his worst he's compassionless.
The determinist believes he isn't accountable for what he does. The buck belongs to something or someone else (reachin' clear back to the Big Bang, or God). At his best he's compassionate; at his worst he's gullible.
The compatibilist believes that he's accountable for some of what he does. The buck is split (35 cents for him, 65 cents for someone or something else). For the life of me, I can't say what such a person is at his best or worst.If man is not a free will, if he's just a meat machine, then all bets are off, the question is meaningless.henry quirk wrote: ↑Fri Oct 14, 2022 12:13 pmThe difference being: the free willist is inclined to believe he has at least some say-so over outcomes while the determinist believes que sera sera.
So, the real question is: *Is man a free will?
best answer, for or against, gets a No Prize and a Gold Star (and mebbe a cookie)
*or, Does man possess free will?
personally, I find this to be an inferior, inaccurate, question
For an illustration, Jesus Christ is part man/ part God. The man part of JC reasons, and the God part of JC is free of causes for His actions.
You and I , Henry, (unlike JC) are not part God and we do nothing that is not caused.