Imagine that there are two distinct worlds that share the same physical laws but are different in that consciousness can emerge from one but not the other. — Yun Jae Jung
As consciousness is not physical in nature, it is not entirely bound to physical elements — Yun Jae Jung
Many inferences possible, one being that free will and proof of free will are different in that the one exists (in ways) without being susceptible of proof of its existence. Or, that it only exists where proved to exist. Or, that it does not exist at all, proofs being errors. Or, that it does exist, proofs being errors.Because you asked.....I hold there is no proof of free will. There is only logical affirmation, and that only under certain conditions. — Mww
Now imagine two systems, one from each world, that are physically identical to each other but are different in that one is conscious while the other is not. — Yun Jae Jung
This establishes the existence of our Free Will because our decisions are affected by non-deterministic factors through our transcendental consciousness." — Yun Jae Jung
So I'm trying to write a small book and was trying to prove the existence of Free Will within a single paragraph. — Yun Jae Jung
The German idealists call randomness and free both spontaneous, but classical matter and in fact all substance (material or not) cannot be warped into a free will properly. Only randomness can be so transformed — Gregory
Couldn't you maintain all physical laws within two worlds such as gravity and electromagnetism but have it so that one is capable of consciousness while the other isn't? — Yun Jae Jung
I'm saying if you could imagine a situation like this, it shows that physical laws alone can't break down the emergence of consciousness. — Yun Jae Jung
Maybe by your definition, but that forecloses on possibility. Lots of verbs for example, refer to non-physical things that are certainly not spiritual. Example: I walk. Walking may indeed be a label for what I am doing, but that's map/territory. Do you see the problem?The OP puts the will in something non-physical which by definition is what we call the spiritual. — Gregory
Are you saying simply that to have a will and it deployed, it must be about something, and the "about" arising out of reason or circumstance? — tim wood
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