Do you believe in free will?
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- Jaymann
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Do you believe in free will?
The gut reaction is: Of course, I am free to do anything I want, why is it even a question?
The argument against free will goes something like this:
You and all the actions you take are a product of your heredity and environment, neither of which are under your control. You may think you are making a conscious choice to say, pick up or not pick up a glass of water. But, non-free will proponents argue, the decision was already made before you took the action. The concept that you are the architect of your actions is an illusion. You cannot create yourself, so there is no such thing as a self-made man.
This line of reasoning also means no one is ultimately responsible for their own actions. Criminals can be locked up to keep them from hurting others, but punishment is meaningless.
Even such proponents concede that it is virtually impossible to live your life without the illusion of free will, but it does not in fact exist, and the literature on this is quite extensive. It is definitely counter intuitive, and somewhat repugnant to think we are all just automatons going through the motions.
You are allowed to "choose" to change your vote.
The argument against free will goes something like this:
You and all the actions you take are a product of your heredity and environment, neither of which are under your control. You may think you are making a conscious choice to say, pick up or not pick up a glass of water. But, non-free will proponents argue, the decision was already made before you took the action. The concept that you are the architect of your actions is an illusion. You cannot create yourself, so there is no such thing as a self-made man.
This line of reasoning also means no one is ultimately responsible for their own actions. Criminals can be locked up to keep them from hurting others, but punishment is meaningless.
Even such proponents concede that it is virtually impossible to live your life without the illusion of free will, but it does not in fact exist, and the literature on this is quite extensive. It is definitely counter intuitive, and somewhat repugnant to think we are all just automatons going through the motions.
You are allowed to "choose" to change your vote.
Jaymann
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
So what you are saying is posting this really wasn't your choice?
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- tgb
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
I'm trying to figure out how it fits under R&P.
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- Kraken
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
There's a religious aspect to the question. If there is no free will, then the universe is a predetermined clockwork. And there is some scientific evidence that free will is an illusion: The nerve impulses are already underway before you consciously decide to pick up that glass of water.
This question also impinges on the nature of the future, and by implication the feasibility of time travel: unless the future is already set, we cannot travel there. Free will would require an infinitude of parallel universes, each of them a possible future. If the future is as frozen as the past, then there can be no free will.
I voted Maybe because thinking about the nature of time makes my brain hurt. I want to believe in free will. I don't like the idea of predetermination. But I honestly don't know.
This question also impinges on the nature of the future, and by implication the feasibility of time travel: unless the future is already set, we cannot travel there. Free will would require an infinitude of parallel universes, each of them a possible future. If the future is as frozen as the past, then there can be no free will.
I voted Maybe because thinking about the nature of time makes my brain hurt. I want to believe in free will. I don't like the idea of predetermination. But I honestly don't know.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
I have to assume that there is. The actual answerable is unknowable, which leaves us with two choices: Assume that there is not, or assume that there is.
If we assume that there is not, then the concept of responsibility becomes irrelevant. Society, law, and achievement become irrelevant.
If we assume that there is, then the world becomes a better place.
I choose the latter.
If we assume that there is not, then the concept of responsibility becomes irrelevant. Society, law, and achievement become irrelevant.
If we assume that there is, then the world becomes a better place.
I choose the latter.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
The more I read about parasites and the microbiome, no.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
This. I debated posting in EBG, but figured if the conversation got into this area, it would be moved to R&P anyway.Kraken wrote: Sat Nov 11, 2017 8:47 pm There's a religious aspect to the question. If there is no free will, then the universe is a predetermined clockwork.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Free will is the result of some of those QED equations rattling around in your neurons and synapses collapsing on the less-probable outcome.
Sort of like the last presidential election in the US. There, now it's R&P.
Sort of like the last presidential election in the US. There, now it's R&P.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
I'm not sure how you can even reconcile a belief in cause and effect with a belief in free will; they contradict each other. How can a decision even have choices? You're going to choose what your brain wants to choose, and your brain's desires are based entirely upon your DNA and your past experiences. Those past experiences were determined by other past experiences, which were determined by other past experiences still, and so on until the first bits of matter were conceived from the primordial energy from whence it all came.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Can someone tell me which way to vote?
It's almost as if people are the problem.
- Max Peck
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Yes, but it will cost you.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Someone already has.
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- Combustible Lemur
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Nope, either the universe is causal or not. Free will is an illusion. What's interesting to me, is that the colony of singular cells that make up me were able to evolve in such a way that they can create an illusion of free will and morality to increase their own Survival. The universe is a weird place.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
At a minimum, we clearly have the illusion of free will. Does it matter beyond that?
You cannot tell whether your actions are an unavoidable chemical response or not, so why does it matter?
I also don’t think that it’s A or B. We are clearly able to make decisions within a band that is probably set by a combination of DNA and experience.
You cannot tell whether your actions are an unavoidable chemical response or not, so why does it matter?
I also don’t think that it’s A or B. We are clearly able to make decisions within a band that is probably set by a combination of DNA and experience.
And in banks across the world
Christians, Moslems, Hindus, Jews
And every other race, creed, colour, tint or hue
Get down on their knees and pray
The raccoon and the groundhog neatly
Make up bags of change
But the monkey in the corner
Well he's slowly drifting out of range
Christians, Moslems, Hindus, Jews
And every other race, creed, colour, tint or hue
Get down on their knees and pray
The raccoon and the groundhog neatly
Make up bags of change
But the monkey in the corner
Well he's slowly drifting out of range
- Kraken
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Sure. I'm feeling a mite peckish. I can choose to eat a snack, or not.RunningMn9 wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 3:31 pm
I also don’t think that it’s A or B. We are clearly able to make decisions within a band that is probably set by a combination of DNA and experience.
Maybe my body is making that decision for me and only letting me think that I chose. Fine, I can choose between a handful of potato chips, a few nuts, or some crackers.
Maybe my body is specifically craving chips on a subconscious level. Fine. I can choose between Utz and Cape Cod, regular or ruffle, plain or flavored. Those choices were determined by what the store had in stock, what was on sale last week, and what coupons I had. Once you get down to the level of shoveling some chips into my maw, though, it's hard to argue that Utz was preordained.
- Combustible Lemur
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
I think RM is right, it doesn't matter and isn't worth worrying about, but if everything is just really complicated physics, you could no more change what's going happen than cast a fireball.Kraken wrote:Sure. I'm feeling a mite peckish. I can choose to eat a snack, or not.RunningMn9 wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 3:31 pm
I also don’t think that it’s A or B. We are clearly able to make decisions within a band that is probably set by a combination of DNA and experience.
Maybe my body is making that decision for me and only letting me think that I chose. Fine, I can choose between a handful of potato chips, a few nuts, or some crackers.
Maybe my body is specifically craving chips on a subconscious level. Fine. I can choose between Utz and Cape Cod, regular or ruffle, plain or flavored. Those choices were determined by what the store had in stock, what was on sale last week, and what coupons I had. Once you get down to the level of shoveling some chips into my maw, though, it's hard to argue that Utz was preordained.
It's either physics or magic.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
This thread ends in Wachowski, doesn't it?
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Consciousness is the wild card. Without knowing what consciousness is, science can't answer that.Combustible Lemur wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 5:35 pmI think RM is right, it doesn't matter and isn't worth worrying about, but if everything is just really complicated physics, you could no more change what's going happen than cast a fireball.Kraken wrote:Sure. I'm feeling a mite peckish. I can choose to eat a snack, or not.RunningMn9 wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 3:31 pm
I also don’t think that it’s A or B. We are clearly able to make decisions within a band that is probably set by a combination of DNA and experience.
Maybe my body is making that decision for me and only letting me think that I chose. Fine, I can choose between a handful of potato chips, a few nuts, or some crackers.
Maybe my body is specifically craving chips on a subconscious level. Fine. I can choose between Utz and Cape Cod, regular or ruffle, plain or flavored. Those choices were determined by what the store had in stock, what was on sale last week, and what coupons I had. Once you get down to the level of shoveling some chips into my maw, though, it's hard to argue that Utz was preordained.
It's either physics or magic.
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- killbot737
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Baked noodles can be delicious. Especially when you cook them with love.
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- Trent Steel
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Which brings me back to my question from a long time ago, how/why am *I* me?Kraken wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 6:55 pmConsciousness is the wild card. Without knowing what consciousness is, science can't answer that.Combustible Lemur wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 5:35 pmI think RM is right, it doesn't matter and isn't worth worrying about, but if everything is just really complicated physics, you could no more change what's going happen than cast a fireball.Kraken wrote:Sure. I'm feeling a mite peckish. I can choose to eat a snack, or not.RunningMn9 wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 3:31 pm
I also don’t think that it’s A or B. We are clearly able to make decisions within a band that is probably set by a combination of DNA and experience.
Maybe my body is making that decision for me and only letting me think that I chose. Fine, I can choose between a handful of potato chips, a few nuts, or some crackers.
Maybe my body is specifically craving chips on a subconscious level. Fine. I can choose between Utz and Cape Cod, regular or ruffle, plain or flavored. Those choices were determined by what the store had in stock, what was on sale last week, and what coupons I had. Once you get down to the level of shoveling some chips into my maw, though, it's hard to argue that Utz was preordained.
It's either physics or magic.
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- Smoove_B
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Your scientists have yet to discover how neural networks create self-consciousness, let alone how the human brain processes two-dimensional retinal images into the three-dimensional phenomenon known as perception. Yet you somehow brazenly declare that seeing is believing!Kraken wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 6:55 pmConsciousness is the wild card. Without knowing what consciousness is, science can't answer that.
Also, go read this book - if they'll let you.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
The pod cast: stuff to blow your mind had a really great two part discussion of the bicameral mind. And while it sounded like the theory is generally considered wrong as a whole, parts have had longevity.Trent Steel wrote: Which brings me back to my question from a long time ago, how/why am *I* me?
Basically, consciousness is a byproduct of increasingly complex society and language skills, and didn't develop until only shortly prior to the golden age of Greece. Prior to that ,instead of thoughts of self, the voice in our head was considered the voices of the gods, literally.
Fascinating stuff.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Smoove_B wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 7:42 pm let alone how the human brain processes two-dimensional retinal images into the three-dimensional phenomenon known as perception.

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Re: Do you believe in free will?
I've never followed this debate closely, but I thought the broad consensus was that Jaynes' Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind was pretty much just unsubstantiated speculation.Combustible Lemur wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 7:45 pmThe pod cast: stuff to blow your mind had a really great two part discussion of the bicameral mind. And while it sounded like the theory is generally considered wrong as a whole, parts have had longevity.Trent Steel wrote: Which brings me back to my question from a long time ago, how/why am *I* me?
Basically, consciousness is a byproduct of increasingly complex society and language skills, and didn't develop until only shortly prior to the golden age of Greece. Prior to that ,instead of thoughts of self, the voice in our head was considered the voices of the gods, literally.
Fascinating stuff.
Much prefer my Nazis Nuremberged.
- Combustible Lemur
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Probably, the podcast just explored the idea and spent a good time at the beginning disclaiming any actual support as a true theory.Holman wrote:I've never followed this debate closely, but I thought the broad consensus was that Jaynes' Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind was pretty much just unsubstantiated speculation.Combustible Lemur wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 7:45 pmThe pod cast: stuff to blow your mind had a really great two part discussion of the bicameral mind. And while it sounded like the theory is generally considered wrong as a whole, parts have had longevity.Trent Steel wrote: Which brings me back to my question from a long time ago, how/why am *I* me?
Basically, consciousness is a byproduct of increasingly complex society and language skills, and didn't develop until only shortly prior to the golden age of Greece. Prior to that ,instead of thoughts of self, the voice in our head was considered the voices of the gods, literally.
Fascinating stuff.
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- Holman
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
It got a big boost from Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash, but that's just fan stuff.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
I clicked "yes" but I do not know if I chose to click "yes" or that was just what I was meant to click.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Agreed.RunningMn9 wrote: Sun Nov 12, 2017 3:31 pm At a minimum, we clearly have the illusion of free will. Does it matter beyond that?
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Since we can't know and since common sense strongly supports the belief in free will, what's gained by presuming we don't have it?
Even more, I can think of all kinds of bad results that likely follow from an ideology rejecting free will. Since we believe ourselves free to believe in free will and to prevent those results, we ought to do so.
It's kind of Pascally.
Even more, I can think of all kinds of bad results that likely follow from an ideology rejecting free will. Since we believe ourselves free to believe in free will and to prevent those results, we ought to do so.
It's kind of Pascally.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Rush wrote:I will choose a path that's clear.
I will choose free will.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
You Pascally Wabbit! I take it you are referring to Pascal's Wager, which essentially says it is rational to believe in God, since it costs you nothing, but if you reject belief you are risking eternal damnation.Holman wrote: Mon Nov 13, 2017 11:35 am Since we can't know and since common sense strongly supports the belief in free will, what's gained by presuming we don't have it?
Even more, I can think of all kinds of bad results that likely follow from an ideology rejecting free will. Since we believe ourselves free to believe in free will and to prevent those results, we ought to do so.
It's kind of Pascally.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Belief in God isn't free, since it is coupled to an implicit requirement for you to conform to a framework of behavioral constraints in order to avoid that pesky eternal damnation.Jaymann wrote: Wed Nov 15, 2017 5:47 pmYou Pascally Wabbit! I take it you are referring to Pascal's Wager, which essentially says it is rational to believe in God, since it costs you nothing, but if you reject belief you are risking eternal damnation.Holman wrote: Mon Nov 13, 2017 11:35 am Since we can't know and since common sense strongly supports the belief in free will, what's gained by presuming we don't have it?
Even more, I can think of all kinds of bad results that likely follow from an ideology rejecting free will. Since we believe ourselves free to believe in free will and to prevent those results, we ought to do so.
It's kind of Pascally.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
The purest form of Pascal's wager is belief in a relaxed and tolerant God who will save you for your belief, expecting little more than what you already accept as the contours of living rightly.Max Peck wrote: Wed Nov 15, 2017 5:55 pmBelief in God isn't free, since it is coupled to an implicit requirement for you to conform to a framework of behavioral constraints in order to avoid that pesky eternal damnation.Jaymann wrote: Wed Nov 15, 2017 5:47 pmYou Pascally Wabbit! I take it you are referring to Pascal's Wager, which essentially says it is rational to believe in God, since it costs you nothing, but if you reject belief you are risking eternal damnation.Holman wrote: Mon Nov 13, 2017 11:35 am Since we can't know and since common sense strongly supports the belief in free will, what's gained by presuming we don't have it?
Even more, I can think of all kinds of bad results that likely follow from an ideology rejecting free will. Since we believe ourselves free to believe in free will and to prevent those results, we ought to do so.
It's kind of Pascally.
This might actually be the definition of most Western religious/spiritual sensibility in the modern age.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Is it really belief if you're just hedging your bets to save your ass though?Jaymann wrote: Wed Nov 15, 2017 5:47 pmYou Pascally Wabbit! I take it you are referring to Pascal's Wager, which essentially says it is rational to believe in God, since it costs you nothing, but if you reject belief you are risking eternal damnation.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
I'd have to say that would be the most insulting form of 'devotion' if I were a deity.
If the devotion is all that matters, even if it's lip service, then it's just a numbers racket. All the different gods, all lined up, and bragging about the size of their flocks.
If the devotion is all that matters, even if it's lip service, then it's just a numbers racket. All the different gods, all lined up, and bragging about the size of their flocks.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
I've never studied it, but I've read in passing that Pascal is largely misunderstood in that the "wager" was never intended to be a sufficient justification for belief.Paingod wrote: Thu Nov 16, 2017 11:41 am I'd have to say that would be the most insulting form of 'devotion' if I were a deity.
If the devotion is all that matters, even if it's lip service, then it's just a numbers racket. All the different gods, all lined up, and bragging about the size of their flocks.
Much prefer my Nazis Nuremberged.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
David Eddings made a living on that premise.Paingod wrote: Thu Nov 16, 2017 11:41 am I'd have to say that would be the most insulting form of 'devotion' if I were a deity.
If the devotion is all that matters, even if it's lip service, then it's just a numbers racket. All the different gods, all lined up, and bragging about the size of their flocks.
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Re: Do you believe in free will?
Yes, because donald Trump is actually president of the usa.
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Also: There are three ways to not tell the truth: lies, damned lies, and statistics.