- Is having the ability to choose your fate better than not having to choose your fate? — I like sushi
Is having the ability to choose your fate better than not having to choose your fate? — I like sushi
Yes but determinism isn't telling us "don't think" — flannel jesus
1) Consequence is being used separate from any concept of causality. — I like sushi
Note: Neither group KNOWS if their belief is True or False. — I like sushi
The question is what Group belief is better? — I like sushi
- A choice not to choose is still a choice.
- A choice to deny that you can choose is a choice.
- A choice to believe there is no choice, against your better judgment, is a choice. — I like sushi
- Would person A and person B faced with the same scenarios act in the same manner assuming they were biologically identical BUT possessing the opposite beliefs as outlined?
- Is having the ability to choose your fate better than not having to choose your fate?
- If person A and person B live out their beliefs and then believed they were wrong and took on the opposing belief how would this effect them? — I like sushi
I think you lost sight of the train of conversation — flannel jesus
This conversation means we have access to freedom from the causal chain. — Fire Ologist
This conversation seems predicated on causality to me - if it were free of the casual chain, we would just be writing random stuff. You're writing to me as if you read what I wrote, indicating that your words are not free from the casual chain. — flannel jesus
If neither group knows the truth of freedom or determinism, then, to them, the truth of freedom is irrelevant. Your question in the thought experiment as THEY would put it is : “since we don’t know whether freedom or determinism is true, which is better to believe?” — Fire Ologist
but I can (I believe) make some predictions about how they would act — I like sushi
But to say what I just said, I had to step out of the causal chain — Fire Ologist
Do you really have a solid reason to believe this? — flannel jesus
I prefer to have my beliefs caused by rational thought and evidence, not beliefs without causes. — flannel jesus
Not the causal chain without me. — Fire Ologist
That is a valid point. They're isn't even an answer to the question of how webs of physical interactions are conscious/have subjective experience/are aware. Add to that the question of how these webs of physical interactions ever got the idea that they are not completely subject to physical interactions.That fact that I can believe I am free means to me that I have to be free, because I have a belief without causes. So that is the best proof. — Fire Ologist
We're part of the causal chain — flannel jesus
What do “you” add to the causal chain, if “your choice” is determined? What happens when the chain bumps into “you” if the effect of “you” is determined? — Fire Ologist
If “my choice” is caused by something that is not my choice, it is not “my choice”.
Add to that the question of how these webs of physical interactions ever got the idea that they are not completely subject to physical interactions. — Patterner
I'm not adding to it, i'm part of it — flannel jesus
what part is “you” specifically — Fire Ologist
I’m saying, once you admit there is a “you” - a thinking, deliberating, believing thing - you have individuated a thing that can be free to choose — Fire Ologist
What it means for me to choose is precisely for the part of the causal chain that is "me" to causally go through a decision making process, and then interact with other things that are also part of the causal chain to enact (or try to enact) the output of my decision making process. — flannel jesus
Determinism tells us exactly what to think, and exactly when to think it. Yes?↪Fire Ologist Yes but determinism isn't telling us "don't think" if we're already thinking - determinisms the one telling us think! Or rather, "we" are defined by determinism, and "we" are defined as "things that think" — flannel jesus
Also glad my observations (despite your, warrantless as it turns out, concern) turn out to also be accurate. — LuckyR
As to why folks who believe humans can't actually choose between options would "fret" about making "wrong" choices, I have no answers (never did). It's just a question. — LuckyR
Determinists share the same basic human psychology as non determinists. They react emotionally to the same types of things in the same types of ways. They aren't zen monks who spend a lot of time meditating and gaining complete control of their emotional state. If they fret, they fret for the same reasons as non determinists, and if it's not beneficial, it's also not beneficial for non determinists. This whole "fretting" conversation doesn't seem to have any sensible lines to draw in the sand between determinists and non determinists. — flannel jesus
Granted, when we are talking about 'choice' itself then maybe you feel this comparison is ill-fitting? — I like sushi
And determinists aren't zen monks, so talking about determinists as if they have more conscious control of their emotional state seems entirely unjustified to me. — flannel jesus
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