Simple question? Why would you think you could replace a word, here, without loss of meaning? — Anthony
When consciousness itself isn't entirely understood, in what way wouldn't it be prevaricating trying to assert a machine can be conscious? — Anthony
If machines truly were sentient — Anthony
Some words are just names for things well-known. Other words, terms-of-art, are invented words, or invented meanings for existing words, and the words themselves or meanings thereof really cannot be understood without already understanding the thing the word refers to. To refer to a machine as intelligent is the use of the word "intelligent" in just that latter sense. — tim wood
I am trying to prove that we can act freely even if we choose not to most of our lives. — Jamesk
I could live for a million years and I wouldn't be too old for college girls. — Terrapin Station
Is it a empirical fact or quite possibly an illusion? That’s my whole argument. — Yajur
So, you are not free with respect to your carb consumption. — Yajur
If you say that the alternative possibility must be under the libertarians control, then what exactly is the libertarian controlling that is not determinative? — Relativist
If I make a choice based on my prior beliefs and dispositions, isn't that choice under my control? That seems to be the case irrespective of whether our free will is libertarian or compatibilist. — Relativist
OK, but any factor under the agent's control seems determinative, which falsifies LFW. — Relativist
Russophobia — Wallows
People can only be fooled so many times. — Wallows
Lies between nations is more difficult. Perhaps some war.... — tim wood
I've read one physicist claiming that this means that existence, time, space, everything must be finite, because infinite sets are logically contradictory, as you can apparently change their ratios by changing the order in which you look at them. — Fuzzball Baggins
What do you guys think? Anything wrong with my reasoning? Anything I've missed? — Fuzzball Baggins
Wasn't Strawson saying that we are not ultimately responsible for our actions? This seems to be a radical claim, and it has huge implications for human concerns. At least I think so. — Noah Te Stroete
This is also what Strawson Jr. is arguing. But my question is - so what? ... [H]ow is this "absolutely free will" ... relevant to any human concerns? — SophistiCat
You could say this with almost any "problem" of philosophy. That's why the average person couldn't care less about philosophy. — Noah Te Stroete
This is false. There are sets of numbers, but number themselves are not at all sets — Ikolos
I don't think cardinality offer a quantitative view of Infinity, since it is either a relation between a set and its elements or between its elements and numbers(e.g. a set is D-
infinite iff for every natural number the set has a subset whose cardinality is that natural number) or between sets(e.g. the cardinal of R is bigger than the cardinal of I) — Ikolos
It seems to me that a person can be said to have an absolutely free will only if that person is in some mysterious sense self-created; that is, only if that person, in some way, was able to choose who they are (their character).
For, ultimately, it is the person's character which determines the motives to which he/she responds, or does not respond, and it is their character for which he/she feels responsible.
This I learned from Arthur Schopenhauer! — charles ferraro
What do you think? Is this evolutionary approach reasonable to the studies of social sciences? — F.C.F.V.
My claim is that mental phenomena supervene on the physical brain. Some difference in the brain is necessary for a change in the mental processes. Also the brain supervenes on mental processes. Any change in mental processes necessitate changes in the brain. Hence, my assertion that there is supervenience BETWEEN mental processes and the brain. — Noah Te Stroete
There are A differences if and only if there are B differences. It goes both ways. Just Google “supervenience”. “If and only if” doesn’t just mean “if”. — Noah Te Stroete
X is said to supervene on Y if and only if some difference in Y is necessary for any difference in X to be possible. — Supervenience - Wikipedia
Supervenience does not do away with cause and effect. The lower level physical realization is subject to cause and effect as is the higher level mental exercise. It's just that the two levels line up 1:1. — Noah Te Stroete
Sounds like an outright attack on morality to me. — Jamesk
No idea. — Devans99
We can still have moral responsibility in the absence of freewill in the Libertarian sense. Strawson's approach is interesting, I haven't read the paper yet but I am interested in what he means by 'truly responsible' and if there is an angle of compatibilism there or not. — Jamesk
But to be truly responsible for how one is, mentally speaking, in certain respects, one must have brought it about that one is the way one is, mentally speaking, in certain respects. And it is not merely that one must have caused oneself to be the way one is, mentally speaking. One must have consciously and explicitly chosen to be the way one is, mentally speaking, in certain respects, and one must have succeeded in bringing it about that one is that way. — The Impossibility of Moral Responsibility
So whenever a limit is evaluated, it’s correct to use the approximately equals sign (~) rather than equals. — Devans99
This could explain some of the rather peculiar results in calculus? — Devans99
Were I to take up the task of writing a book on free will again, I would read opposing views extensively, as I did for my book on naturalism. Until I do take up that task, Strawson is not likely to be on my reading list. — Dfpolis
Reading the full argument prompts me to observe that responsibility as something that we practice every day has less to do with "making one the way one is, mentally speaking" and more to do with trying to influence other people, events, and the condition of things. — Valentinus
