(2017-11-08, 06:25 PM)Paul C. Anagnostopoulos Wrote: I am making no such argument. What's really going on in this conversation is that I'm asking for a description of free will that is beyond the deterministic/random dichotomy and you just keeping giving me trouble for preaching the dichotomy. I stopped preaching it pages ago.
Let's assume it's utterly and completely invalid. Now, will you give me a description of some other form of decision making?
You can't be serious. So far, your argument doesn't even include a definition of free will. Because if we reject determinism and random as undefined, then "something other than determinism and randomness" is also undefined. So what is free will? [See next post.]
~~ Paul
As I requested earlier, can you pick any causal process and explain the "how" of it?
Because it seems to me I've already given examples of how free will would work in particular metaphysics, but if you can give us a "how" of any causal process perhaps we can move beyond this impasse?
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
(2017-11-09, 12:24 AM)Sciborg_S_Patel Wrote: As I requested earlier, can you pick any causal process and explain the "how" of it?
Because it seems to me I've already given examples of how free will would work in particular metaphysics, but if you can give us a "how" of any causal process perhaps we can move beyond this impasse?
I cannot, except see next paragraph.
Would you be willing to give a succinct description of how free will works in some metaphysic? I don't need another name for the agent of free will. I think I need a description of cause and effect in that metaphysic, but it cannot simply be "agent X causes event Y by will." That is no more detailed than "events X and Y cause Z by physical interaction" or "without event X, Z cannot occur" or "event Z happens at random."
If you believe that we cannot get any more detailed than those scenarios, then so be it.
~~ Paul
If the existence of a thing is indistinguishable from its nonexistence, we say that thing does not exist. ---Yahzi
Question: If pk is a real phenomenon, does that then lead to the existence of free will? My belief is "definitely"....
My reasoning.... if the intention of an individual or group of individuals can affect a separate physical system through no physical means other than intention, then free will must exist. If free will does not exist then how else can an intention or will of the individual(s) physically alter a system?
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