• Corvus
    3.4k
    By the Law of Contradiction, free will cannot be the case, as it would result in a contradiction. At exactly 1pm I can't equally decide to press or not press the letter "T" and decide to press the letter "T" at the same time.RussellA

    It sounds like you decided to contradict your decision and action at 1 pm from your free will. :D
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    demonstrate to me how introspection revealed to you that free will is an illusion, and you live in a deterministic world,Metaphysician Undercover

    I don't believe in particular that thoughts can cause themselves, and I don't believe in general in spontaneous self-causation.

    One reason for my disbelief in spontaneous self-causation is that it is something I have never observed.

    When I see a billiard ball on a billiard table start to move for no reason at all, then I may change my mind.
    ===============================================================================
    No "reason why" is given for that law, it is stated as a descriptive factMetaphysician Undercover

    Law of nature has more than one meaning.

    It can be a description, as Newton's first law. From SEP - Laws of Nature
    Science includes many principles at least once thought to be laws of nature: Newton’s law of gravitation, his three laws of motion, the ideal gas laws, Mendel’s laws, the laws of supply and demand, and so on.

    It can be an explanation. As you wrote:

    A "law of nature" in this sense necessarily precedes the event, because the laws of nature are what makes things act the way that they do.Metaphysician Undercover
    ===============================================================================
    However, I see no reason to discuss them if they are just proposed as reason to accept the illogical premise of contemporaneousness.Metaphysician Undercover

    One of the reasons I don't believe in free will is that it requires self-causation, where the thought one has is contemporaneous with the decision to have the thought.
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    I don't believe in particular that thoughts can cause themselves, and I don't believe in general in spontaneous self-causation.

    One reason for my disbelief in spontaneous self-causation is that it is something I have never observed.

    When I see a billiard ball on a billiard table start to move for no reason at all, then I may change my mind.
    RussellA

    Haven't you seen parts of your body start to move without being acted on by an external force? If the "reason" for movement is an immaterial "idea", then this is evidence of free will. Isn't it?

    Law of nature has more than one meaning.RussellA

    I was the one who used "law of nature", and I gave you the explanation of the sense in which I was using it. It makes no sense for you to say that you want me to have been using it in a different way, because that would better support what you belief in.

    One of the reasons I don't believe in free will is that it requires self-causation, where the thought one has is contemporaneous with the decision to have the thought.RussellA

    The concept of "free will" does not involve self-causation. I don't see where you get that idea from. Thoughts are the property of a being with free will, just like arms and legs are. We do not decide to have thoughts, just like we do not decide to have arms and legs, but this doesn't mean that we do not also have a free will.
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    Haven't you seen parts of your body start to move without being acted on by an external force? If the "reason" for movement is an immaterial "idea", then this is evidence of free will. Isn't it?Metaphysician Undercover

    No. Suppose a person has the idea to reach out for a cup of coffee.

    On the one hand, assuming free will, a person can have the idea to reach out for a cup of coffee. On the other hand, assuming there is no free will, a person can also have the idea to reach out for a cup of coffee.

    Having an idea is nether evidence for or against free will.
    ===============================================================================
    I was the one who used "law of nature"Metaphysician Undercover

    I have never said that I want you to be using the term "law of nature" in a different way.

    My point has been that I don't accept that a law of nature precedes an event and makes things act the way they do.

    A "law of nature" in this sense necessarily precedes the event, because the laws of nature are what makes things act the way that they do.Metaphysician Undercover
    ===============================================================================
    The concept of "free will" does not involve self-causation.Metaphysician Undercover

    At 1pm a person has the thought to reach out for a cup of coffee.

    Free will means that at 1pm that person could equally have had the thought not to reach out for the cup of coffee.

    It is not possible to have two contradictory thoughts contemporaneously, both to reach out and not reach out.

    One the one hand, free will is equally free have either of two contradictory thoughts, but on the other hand, free will is equally free to choose to act on one of these thoughts.

    It seems that if free will is equally free to act on the thought of reaching out rather than not reaching out, then it is equally free to act of the thought of not reaching out as rather than reaching out.

    If free to make any decision, then there would be no reason to make any decision, leading to the inability to be able to make any decision at all.
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    No. Suppose a person has the idea to reach out for a cup of coffee.

    On the one hand, assuming free will, a person can have the idea to reach out for a cup of coffee. On the other hand, assuming there is no free will, a person can also have the idea to reach out for a cup of coffee.

    Having an idea is nether evidence for or against free will.
    RussellA

    I don't see how this is relevant.

    My point has been that I don't accept that a law of nature precedes an event and makes things act the way they do.RussellA

    Then you do not accept my explanation.

    At 1pm a person has the thought to reach out for a cup of coffee.

    Free will means that at 1pm that person could equally have had the thought not to reach out for the cup of coffee.
    RussellA

    Free will is not about the thoughts, it concerns the acts.

    It is not possible to have two contradictory thoughts contemporaneously, both to reach out and not reach out.RussellA

    Yes it is possible, and your example demonstrates this. The person, at 1Pm, entertains both, the thought of reaching out for a coffee, and the thought of not reaching out for a coffee. That's what choice and deliberation is all about, having contradictory thoughts at the same time. From this condition, a choice is made. And because it is possible for the person to choose either of the two contradictory ways of acting, we conclude that the will is free. It is not forced by any cause, in one direction or another. There is a cause of the act, which is the will itself, but the will is not caused to choose one or the other.

    It seems that if free will is equally free to act on the thought of reaching out rather than not reaching out, then it is equally free to act of the thought of not reaching out as rather than reaching out.RussellA

    Right, doesn't your own personal experience demonstrate the truth of free will to you? You are equally free to reach out for the coffee, or to not reach out for the coffee. You are free to choose.
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    An argument against Free Will
    At 1pm exactly I have the idea to pick up a cup of coffee.

    Assuming free will, at T seconds prior to 1pm, it hasn't been determined whether at 1pm I will have the idea to pick up the cup of coffee or not to pick up the cup of coffee.

    Suppose T is 1 second. If it has been determined at 1 second before 1pm that I have the idea at 1pm to pick up the cup of coffee then this is no longer free will.

    Suppose T is seconds. If it has been determined at second before 1pm that I have the idea at 1pm to pick up the cup of coffee then this is no longer free will.

    "T" can be any number

    Therefore, free will only applies if I choose between picking up the cup of coffee and not picking up the cup of coffee at 1pm exactly.

    But this means that at 1pm I have two contradictory ideas in my mind at exactly the same time. But this is impossible, meaning that free will cannot be a valid theory.

    I have seen evidence that a person can have two contradictory ideas consecutively, but I have never seen any evidence that a person can have two contradictory ideas at the same time.
    ===============================================================================
    I don't see how this is relevant.Metaphysician Undercover

    Having an idea is not evidence for free will if ideas have been causally determined in a causally determined world.
    ===============================================================================
    Then you do not accept my explanation.Metaphysician Undercover

    You have described a world where things obey the laws of nature, but I don't see where you have explained why things obey the laws of nature.
    ===============================================================================
    Free will is not about the thoughts, it concerns the acts.Metaphysician Undercover

    I thought free will referred to our being free to have whatever thoughts we wanted

    This sounds more like instinct, in that I look at a bright light and instinctively close my eyes.
    ===============================================================================
    That's what choice and deliberation is all about, having contradictory thoughts at the same time.Metaphysician Undercover

    I agree that a person can have two contradictory thoughts consecutively, but it would be impossible for a person to have two contradictory thoughts contemporaneously.
    ===============================================================================
    You are equally free to reach out for the coffee, or to not reach out for the coffee. You are free to choose.Metaphysician Undercover

    How do you know that we are free to choose?

    How do you know that we don't live in a causally determined world, where our actions have been causally determined?
  • Barkon
    178
    Why does something being determined mean that the person has no control? Perhaps it's just predictable behaviour.
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    Why does something being determined mean that the person has no control? Perhaps it's just predictable behaviour.Barkon

    If Determinism is true, then all our thoughts and actions are determined by causes external to our will. Our future is already written, and all our thoughts and actions are a consequence of preceding events.

    In that sense, if all our thoughts and actions are determined, then it is true that we have no control.

    However, in ordinary language, we do say things like "he was determined not to waste a single minute of his time" and "she was weak and the pain was excruciating, but she was determined to go home."

    But the fact that a person is determined to do something, does not mean that their determination cannot be explained within Determinism.

    If Determinism determines all our thoughts and actions, our being determined is just one of these thoughts, meaning that it is Determinism that determines our being determined to do something.
  • Patterner
    1.1k
    At 1pm a person has the thought to reach out for a cup of coffee.

    Free will means that at 1pm that person could equally have had the thought not to reach out for the cup of coffee.
    — RussellA

    Free will is not about the thoughts, it concerns the acts.
    Metaphysician Undercover
    Correct. Free will means, regardless of what actually happened, whether the cup of coffee was picked up or not, it could have gone the other way. Unlike a pool table, where, once in motion, the balls can only end up in one exact arrangement, due to the laws of physics. The same with all the air molecules in a room. We know statistically how they will behave. But we can't calculate even one molecule's position one minute into the future, because there are more factors involved than we are capable of keeping track of. But all of those factors determine where each molecule will be in one minute, and there is no possibility that they can be anywhere else.
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    There can be thoughts not resulting in acts.

    For example, I may think that Monet's "Water-lilies" is aesthetic or I may think that it is not aesthetic. Neither thought requires me to act on the thought.
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    Therefore, free will only applies if I choose between picking up the cup of coffee and not picking up the cup of coffee at 1pm exactly.RussellA

    This is a faulty argument because your designated time of "1pm" is completely arbitrary, and not representative of the true nature of time. As indicated by the relativity of simultaneity a precise designation of "what time it is", is frame of reference dependent.

    But this means that at 1pm I have two contradictory ideas in my mind at exactly the same time. But this is impossible, meaning that free will cannot be a valid theory.

    I have seen evidence that a person can have two contradictory ideas consecutively, but I have never seen any evidence that a person can have two contradictory ideas at the same time.
    RussellA

    As I explained in my last post, having two contradictory ideas at the same time is exactly what deliberation consists of. "Should I stay or should I go". The Clash, a fitting name.

    "Critical thinking", and philosophy in general, is all about comparing contradictory ideas. A philosopher holds these contradictory ideas within one's mind, at the same time. It is the judgement, the choice to act on one or the other, consequently the physical action itself, that results from the judgement, which cannot be both. Furthermore, denying that people can hold contradictory ideas at the same time, denies the reality of much human misunderstanding.

    The problem here, is that you are treating a human subject as if one is a material object, to which the fundamental laws of logic (identity, noncontradiction, excluded middle), apply. This is a mistake of sophistry which Aristotle keenly exposed, and he demonstrated the misunderstanding which this sophistry propagates, thousands of years ago. The reality, as shown by Aristotle, is that if we adhere to the three fundamental laws of logic in cases involving human decisions, sophists can logically prove absurdities. The "sea battle tomorrow" is his famous example, of why the fundamental laws cannot be applied to subjects. In more recent times, C.S. Peirce has done considerable work on this issue.

    You have described a world where things obey the laws of nature, but I don't see where you have explained why things obey the laws of nature.RussellA

    Why would I even try to do that? What I explained, is that some people use "laws of nature" to explain why things behave in a consistent way, describable by the laws of physics. This is a sort of governance, similar to the governance of "God". What's the point to even asking why matter obeys God, if you do not even believe that matter obeys God. That would be a ridiculous question to ask. You'd be asking why does Y follow X, when you do not even believe that Y does follow X. Any one who tried to answer you would be engaged in an exercise in futility.

    I thought free will referred to our being free to have whatever thoughts we wantedRussellA

    Free will is the ability to choose freely.

    I agree that a person can have two contradictory thoughts consecutively, but it would be impossible for a person to have two contradictory thoughts contemporaneously.RussellA

    Do you agree, that by the special theory of relativity, event A could be prior to event B from one frame of reference, and posterior from another frame of reference? Since a human being is composed of many different parts, moving in many different ways, many different frames of reference are available within one human body. Therefore your stipulation of "contemporaneously" is completely unwarranted, and nothing but an arbitrary, fictional condition, imposed for the sake of your argument, when it's not a truthful representation of reality in any way.

    How do you know that we are free to choose?

    How do you know that we don't live in a causally determined world, where our actions have been causally determined?
    RussellA

    I know that I am free to choose, from introspection, analysis of my own experience.

    Here's a simple experiment you can try yourself, in the comfort of your own home. Hold a small, soft object in your fingers, extended at arms length, and decide that you will drop it at some random time in the near future. Hold it for a short time, and notice that you can decide to drop it at any random time, without any causal influence, just a freely willed choice to let it go.

    Unlike a pool table, where, once in motion, the balls can only end up in one exact arrangement, due to the laws of physics.Patterner

    However, someone can at any moment, reach in and stop the balls from moving in that predetermined way. And this demonstrates that free will has superiority over determinism, a phenomenon known as "the hand of God", which renders "miracles" as other than impossible.
  • Barkon
    178
    If determinism is true that's that all our actions are determined. That's all. It doesn't mean it's determined by causes external to our will. If it's determined that I will write this, then all that means is that it was probable that I would, thus it was determinable prior to the act. If in the beginning of the universe, everything was determined, all it means is that something powerful enough has collected all the information and decided that evidence points to a certain conclusion. I don't know where determinists are getting the idea of no control from - having consciousness and a mind certifies control.

    This is what you are saying: it was determined since the beginning, thus I have no control. That's false. What's true is that if it was determined since the beginning, it's probable that the acts that follow are the determined ones.

    If it's to be argued that determinism means something else, it can be dismissed as pure fantasy and delusion that a consciousness, with a mind, is out of control of its own actions, due to some higher force. It equates God belief. You literally believe all your actions are guided by some force other than yourself.

    Edit: I think you're confusing determinism with impossiblism.
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    This is a faulty argument because your designated time of "1pm" is completely arbitrary, and not representative of the true nature of time. As indicated by the relativity of simultaneity a precise designation of "what time it is", is frame of reference dependent.........................Do you agree, that by the special theory of relativity, event A could be prior to event B from one frame of reference, and posterior from another frame of reference?Metaphysician Undercover

    In my location, 1pm is simultaneous with my picking up a cup of coffee.
    ===============================================================================
    As I explained in my last post, having two contradictory ideas at the same time is exactly what deliberation consists of. "Should I stay or should I go".Metaphysician Undercover

    This is why the words in the proposition "should I stay or should I go" are sequential. First one asks "should I stay" and then at a later time one asks "should I go".

    Propositions, in that they mirror thoughts, are sequential.
    ===============================================================================
    The problem here, is that you are treating a human subject as if one is a material object, to which the fundamental laws of logic (identity, noncontradiction, excluded middle), apply.Metaphysician Undercover

    This is the case in a Deterministic world.
    ===============================================================================
    What's the point to even asking why matter obeys God, if you do not even believe that matter obeys God.Metaphysician Undercover

    It is not only a question of whether or not matter obeys God, it is also the question of is there a God.
    ===============================================================================
    I know that I am free to choose, from introspection, analysis of my own experience.Metaphysician Undercover

    If Determinism is the case, and determines all our thoughts and actions, then your thought that you are free to choose is just another of those thoughts that have already been determined.
  • Barkon
    178
    your last paragraph sounds like word salad, it's completely nonsensical:

    If determinism is true, and (it; who? What?) determines all our thoughts and actions, then...
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    If determinism is true that all our actions are determined. That's all. It doesn't mean it's determined by causes external to our will. If it's determined that I will write this, then all that means is that it was probable that I would, thus it was determinable prior to the act.Barkon

    My understanding of Determinism is that your writing your post was inevitable, not probable.

    From Wikipedia Determinism
    Determinism is the philosophical view that all events in the universe, including human decisions and actions, are causally inevitable

    From SEP - Causal Determinism
    In order to get started we can begin with a loose and (nearly) all-encompassing definition as follows:
    Determinism: Determinism is true of the world if and only if, given a specified way things are at a time t, the way things go thereafter is fixed as a matter of natural law.
  • Barkon
    178
    then it should be called inevitablism, not determinism. Having determined something will happen is not the same as it being inevitable.
  • Barkon
    178
    Let's say it's determined that I will go to do something and then deny that action because I want to test if it is inevitable. That's a determinable thing if someone has enough information about me. However, it doesn't mean that it is inevitable that I will do it. It just means that it's probable.
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    If determinism is true, and (it; who? What?) determines all our thoughts and actionsBarkon

    OK. If Determinism is the case, and all our thoughts and actions are already determined, then your thought that you are free to choose is just another of those thoughts that have already been determined.

    Determined by the nature of the Universe.
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    then it should be called inevitablism, not determinism. Having determined something will happen is not the same as it being inevitable.Barkon

    Determinism seems to encompass more than Inevitabilism, and includes the concept of inevitability.

    From Wikipedia Determinism
    Determinism is the philosophical view that all events in the universe, including human decisions and actions, are causally inevitable

    Wiktionary - Inevitabilism
    The belief that certain developments are impossible to avoid; determinism.

    Wiktionary - Determinism
    The doctrine that all actions are determined by the current state and immutable laws of the universe, with no possibility of choice.
  • Barkon
    178
    fine. Then I concede. However it seems like a poor choice of words.
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    This is why the words in the proposition "should I stay or should I go" are sequential. First one asks "should I stay" and then at a later time one asks "should I go".RussellA

    Speaking is a physical act, and that requires a choice to say one or the other first, as I said. However, the fact that they cannot both be said by the person at the same time does not imply that the person cannot have both ideas within one's mind at the same time.

    Clearly people multitask, so they are thinking different ideas at the same time, required to do a number of different things at the same time, even though they cannot say everything that they are doing, all at the same time. S o why can they not have contradictory ideas at the same time?

    The fact that people have many different ideas in their minds at the same time (required for multitasking) demonstrates that the subject matter of your criticism is just a limitation on the physical capacity of speaking, not a limitation on the capacity of thinking. How do you account for a person having many different ideas, in one's memory, all at the same time, which one cannot all say at the same time? Not being able to say everything which one has in one's memory, all at the same time, does not imply that the person doesn't have all those ideas in one's memory, all at the same time.

    If Determinism is the case, and determines all our thoughts and actions, then your thought that you are free to choose is just another of those thoughts that have already been determined.RussellA

    Sure, you can state irrelevant conditionals, just like I can say that if I was not born yet, I would not be writing this right now, but such conditionals are not relevant to reality.

    The question was, how does introspection reveal to you that determinism is the case, and free will is an illusion. Your if/then statement reveals nothing more than "if I was not born yet I would not be writing this right now" reveals. How do I get from this to believing that I was not born yet? And how do you get from your if/then statement to believing that determinism is the case?

    This is what you are saying: it was determined since the beginning, thus I have no control. That's false. What's true is that if it was determined since the beginning, it's probable that the acts that follow are the determined ones.Barkon

    In this form of determinism, how do you account for acts which fall outside of being probable, the acts that occur which were not probable? These would not be deterministic, and there would be a whole lot of acts which follow from each improbable act, all not determined from the beginning.
  • Barkon
    178

    Either 1 or 2.
    1. We never do anything improbable(given enough prediction power).
    2. The determinator catches up and re-determines from when an improbable act occurs.

    It may seem bizarre, but it's more sensible than the original determinism which exhibits 'no control'.
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    However, the fact that they cannot both be said by the person at the same time does not imply that the person cannot have both ideas within one's mind at the same time.Metaphysician Undercover

    If it were possible to have two contradictory thoughts at the same time, then I could feel pain in my finger and not feel pain in my finger at the same time.

    Language mirrors thoughts.

    If it were possible to have two contradictory thoughts at the same time, then language would mirror this. For example, the proposition would be "I feel x in my finger", where "x" means feeling both pain and no pain at the same time.

    However this is not the case. In language we say "one hour ago I felt no pain in my finger but now I feel pain in my finger".

    Language by its very nature acknowledges that contradictory thoughts cannot be contemporaneous.
    ===============================================================================
    Clearly people multitask, so they are thinking different ideas at the same time, required to do a number of different things at the same time, even though they cannot say everything that they are doing, all at the same time.Metaphysician Undercover

    A cyclist multi-tasks when they pedal and watch the road ahead at the same time. But thoughts about the road ahead should not be confused with the muscle memory of pedalling, which doesn't require thoughts.

    A student multi-tasks when writing an essay and listens to music at the same time. But thoughts about what to write should not be confused with an instinctive pleasure in hearing music.

    Musical pleasure and reward: mechanisms and dysfunction

    Most people derive pleasure from music. Neuroimaging studies show that the reward system of the human brain is central to this experience. Specifically, the dorsal and ventral striatum release dopamine when listening to pleasurable music, and activity in these structures also codes the reward value of musical excerpts.
    ===============================================================================
    How do you account for a person having many different ideas, in one's memory, all at the same time, which one cannot all say at the same time?Metaphysician Undercover

    I have many memories, none of which I am actively thinking about at this moment in time.
    ===============================================================================
    Sure, you can state irrelevant conditionals, just like I can say that if I was not born yet, I would not be writing this right now, but such conditionals are not relevant to reality.Metaphysician Undercover

    Conditions in thought are essential to life:
    If I don't eat, then I will die
    If I cross the road now, then the approaching truck will run me over
    If I don't apply for this job then it is unlikely that they will hire me
    If an asteroid 15km in diameter hits the Earth, then most life may become extinct.
    ===============================================================================
    Your if/then statement reveals nothing more than "if I was not born yet I would not be writing this right now" reveals. How do I get from this to believing that I was not born yet? And how do you get from your if/then statement to believing that determinism is the case?Metaphysician Undercover

    One cannot.

    If I had not been born, then I would not be writing this post
    I am writing this post
    Therefore I was born

    If Determinism is the case
    then all thoughts are determined
    I have the thought that my thoughts are not determined
    therefore my thought that my thought has not been determined has been determined
  • Patterner
    1.1k
    If it were possible to have two contradictory thoughts at the same time, then I could feel pain in my finger and not feel pain in my finger at the same time.RussellA
    That's having contradictory feelings in your finger at the same time, not having contradictory thoughts at the same time. If one part of your finger is touching an ice cube, and you hold a match to another part of your finger, then you would be feeling hot and cold in your finger at the same time.


    If I had not been born, then I would not be writing this post
    I am writing this post
    Therefore I was born
    RussellA
    If you did not exist, then you would not be writing that post. Perhaps you were created in a lab. Or you are a computer program. Or you are an eternal being that has always existed, and you erase your memory every so often in order to remain sane.
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    2. The determinator catches up and re-determines from when an improbable act occurs.Barkon

    What's "the determinator", the hand of God? Is that like if your clock gets left behind, you have to reset it or else all your actions get at the wrong time?

    If it were possible to have two contradictory thoughts at the same time, then I could feel pain in my finger and not feel pain in my finger at the same time.RussellA

    One example of contradictory thoughts, which you personally would not have, does not prove that contradictory thoughts, in general are impossible. As I said, contradictory thoughts are present in deliberation. Accordingly, if a person does not know whether oneself is feeling pain in the finger or not (perhaps that person is just learning the meaning of "pain"), and the person is deliberating on this, one could be considering both thoughts, I am feeling pain in my finger, I am not feeling pain in my finger, as real possibilities, at the same time.

    A cyclist multi-tasks when they pedal and watch the road ahead at the same time. But thoughts about the road ahead should not be confused with the muscle memory of pedalling, which doesn't require thoughts.

    A student multi-tasks when writing an essay and listens to music at the same time. But thoughts about what to write should not be confused with an instinctive pleasure in hearing music.
    RussellA

    Muscle memory does not exclude conscious thought. People whistle while they work. The work clearly requires conscious thought, but so does the whistling, just like pedaling a bike, and walking require conscious thought. We do not pedal, or walk without any conscious thought.

    The issue is that when we multitask in this way, we prioritize one action over the other, paying more attention to one than the other. However, if you have ever taken a look at how this multitasking actually occurs, you'll see that there is constant switching of which act receives priority. So if whistling while you work involves a difficult aspect of work, attention will be focused on the work, but if the work is significantly mundane, effort can be focused on practising the whistle. In general, there is a continuous balance of priority between the two, enabling both efforts to flow smoothly, but the moment that a difficult aspect of one or the other is apprehended, more attention is focused in that direction. Notice, that's "more attention", not all of one's attention. this is the way that goals and intention work in general, we prioritize things.

    I agree that there is ongoing debate amongst neurologists etc., concerning how many different tasks a person can "focus" on. But the problem with most experimental data available is that the scientists involved in these questions start with a faulty premise of what "focus one's attention" means. They assume the phrase to mean directing one's attention toward one activity only, and they judge experimental data from this perspective, neglecting the other things of lower priority, within one's field of attention, assuming the one thing is the only thing focused on . However, this excludes from the outset, the possibility that "focus one's attention" means to prioritize a number of things within one's field of attention. From that faulty premise, the prioritized activity becomes the only activity within one's attention.

    I have many memories, none of which I am actively thinking about at this moment in time.RussellA

    This does not resolve the problem. The issue is the existence within a person's mind, of contradictory ideas. You deny the reality of this fact, so you point to a person's actions, and say that a person cannot express, or demonstrate, through speaking, or writing, contradictory ideas at the very same moment. But all this really does, is demonstrate the physical limitations to a human beings actions.

    So, I have proposed that we look at a person's memory, where we can see very clearly that a person very often holds contradictory ideas within one's mind, through the use of memory. You reply by saying that you are never "actively thinking" about all your memories at the same time, again appealing to the limitations of activity. However, your appeal does not provide the argument you need. It is very clear that we actively think about a multitude of ideas at the same time, that's exactly what the act of thinking is, to relate ideas to each other. The use of memory allows us to increase the number of ideas currently being thought about, by relegating those with lower priority at a specific moment, to memory, then bringing them back when priority demands. Further, it is very clear that we "actively think" about contradictory ideas in the process of deliberation.

    What has become very clear, is that when we include memory as part of the mind, there is no doubt whatsoever as to the fact that a person can have contradictory ideas within one's mind. However, since you are unwilling to accept the reality that people have contradictory ideas within their minds, you have now proceed to exclude the memory as part of the mind. All your are doing is demonstrating that you will take ridiculously absurd steps to support an untenable position.

    Philosophy has as its purpose the desire to learn. If your prejudice is so strong, that you are forced into absurd assumptions to support this prejudice, instead of relinquishing it, to adopt a more true path, I consider you are not practising philosophy at all, but professing faulty ideas.

    If I had not been born, then I would not be writing this post
    I am writing this post
    Therefore I was born

    If Determinism is the case
    then all thoughts are determined
    I have the thought that my thoughts are not determined
    therefore my thought that my thought has not been determined has been determined
    RussellA

    To make a proper comparison, you would need to say, as the second premise in the first argument, "I have the thought that I am writing this post". But then you do not have a valid conclusion. So, to be consistent in your analogy, and to have valid conclusions, we have to state the second premise of the second argument as ""my thoughts are not determined".
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    If one part of your finger is touching an ice cube, and you hold a match to another part of your finger, then you would be feeling hot and cold in your finger at the same time.Patterner

    I can have the thought of coldness, and can then have the thought of hotness, but the question is, is it possible to have a single thought of both coldness and hotness at the same time.
    ===============================================================================
    Or you are an eternal being that has always existedPatterner

    Possible.

    If I didn't exist, then I couldn't think
    I think
    Therefore I am
  • Patterner
    1.1k
    I can have the thought of coldness, and can then have the thought of hotness, but the question is, is it possible to have a single thought of both coldness and hotness at the same time.RussellA
    Yes, that's the real question. I'm just saying you can receive conflicting feelings from your finger simultaneously. I wonder if, if the ice and match are close enough together, it might feel as though the conflicting feelings are coming from the exact same spot.
  • Mapping the Medium
    211
    You cannot use "exist" on the abstract concepts.Corvus

    Hmm .... I haven't been on the 'forum' for several years, but this is a good starting place for me to jump back in. :grin:

    'Abstractions' are a huge can of worms, and their wriggling is very real. ... It's how biological creatures understand and apply them that can either be very useful or very dangerous (we're stepping into that danger now with AI haphazard hypostatic abstraction). ... When you understand thought as a system, you cannot possibly dismiss its very real 'existence'.
  • frank
    16k
    When you understand thought as a system, you cannot possibly dismiss its very real 'existence'.Mapping the Medium

    I think there are two approaches, which reflect temperament.

    1. Start with an ontological bias, like materialism, and try to find a bridge from that to the world we all inhabit.

    2. Start within the world we all inhabit, naming things and making observations, and leave the explanation open ended, realizing that though we may lust to have a theory, we can never have the vantage point necessary to verify it.

    The first approach is best for people who want to wrap philosophy around themselves like a web that gets tighter and tighter with every movement. The second approach allows a person to lay philosophy down in a neat package. Maybe people go back and forth between the two.

    Merry Christmas!!!
  • RussellA
    1.8k
    I am feeling pain in my finger, I am not feeling pain in my finger, as real possibilities, at the same time.Metaphysician Undercover

    I still cannot understand how a person can feel a pain and not feel a pain in their finger at the same time.
    ===============================================================================
    Muscle memory does not exclude conscious thought.Metaphysician Undercover

    From Wikipedia - Muscle Memory
    When a movement is repeated over time, the brain creates a long-term muscle memory for that task, eventually allowing it to be performed with little to no conscious effort.
    ===============================================================================
    However, if you have ever taken a look at how this multitasking actually occurs, you'll see that there is constant switching of which act receives priority.Metaphysician Undercover

    That is exactly what I am saying, attention is switched between events, first one, then the other. But not at the same time.
    ===============================================================================
    I agree that there is ongoing debate amongst neurologists etc., concerning how many different tasks a person can "focus" on... They assume the phrase to mean directing one's attention toward one activity onlyMetaphysician Undercover

    That's my position, where attention is directed towards one activity only.
    ===============================================================================
    You deny the reality of this fact, so you point to a person's actions, and say that a person cannot express, or demonstrate, through speaking, or writing, contradictory ideas at the very same moment. But all this really does, is demonstrate the physical limitations to a human beings actions.Metaphysician Undercover

    I agree, human beings are limited in what they can do.
    ===============================================================================
    It is very clear that we actively think about a multitude of ideas at the same time, that's exactly what the act of thinking is, to relate ideas to each other.Metaphysician Undercover

    This is important point.

    I can understand that a person having a painful finger can think about the pain, and later, after the pain has dissipated, think about there being no pain in their finger, but I cannot understand how a person can feel a pain and not feel a pain in their finger at the same time.

    I agree that a person can remember having first a painful finger and later a pain-free finger, and can then think about the relation between a painful finger and pain-free finger.

    Even if it were impossible, as I think it is, to have a single thought about two contradictory events, this raise the question as whether it is possible to have a single thought about the relation between two contradictory events.

    What are relations?

    If I think about a relation between two different things, does what I think about include what is being related?

    This is getting into Kant's transcendental unity of apperception territory.
    ===============================================================================
    However, since you are unwilling to accept the reality that people have contradictory ideas within their minds, you have now proceed to exclude the memory as part of the mind.Metaphysician Undercover

    I totally agree that people have contradictory ideas within their memories, but not that they are thinking about two contradictory ideas at the same time.
    ===============================================================================
    Philosophy has as its purpose the desire to learn. If your prejudice is so strong, that you are forced into absurd assumptions to support this prejudice, instead of relinquishing it, to adopt a more true path, I consider you are not practising philosophy at all, but professing faulty ideas.Metaphysician Undercover

    Unfortunately, I am not persuaded to follow the "true path" that you are laying out for me.

    If Determinism is truly a philosophically faulty idea, then at least I am in good company.
    From the Wikipedia article on Determinism

    Determinism was developed by the Greek philosophers during the 7th and 6th centuries BCE by the Pre-socratic philosophers Heraclitus and Leucippus, later Aristotle, and mainly by the Stoics. Some of the main philosophers who have dealt with this issue are Marcus Aurelius, Omar Khayyam, Thomas Hobbes, Baruch Spinoza, Gottfried Leibniz, David Hume, Baron d'Holbach (Paul Heinrich Dietrich), Pierre-Simon Laplace, Arthur Schopenhauer, William James, Friedrich Nietzsche, Albert Einstein, Niels Bohr, Ralph Waldo Emerson and, more recently, John Searle, Ted Honderich, and Daniel Dennett.
    ===============================================================================
    To make a proper comparison, you would need to say, as the second premise in the first argument, "I have the thought that I am writing this post".Metaphysician Undercover

    P1 - If Determinism is false, then my thoughts have not been determined
    P2 - If Determinism is true, then my thoughts have been determined
    P3 - I have the thought that I am writing this post
    C1 - Therefore my thought may or may not have been determined

    P1 - If Determinism is false, then my thoughts have not been determined,
    P2 - I have the thought that I am writing this post
    C1 - Therefore my thought has not been determined

    P1 - If Determinism is true, then my thoughts have been determined
    P2 - I have the thought that I am writing this post
    C1 - Therefore my thought has been determined

    Having a thought is not sufficient evidence for either Determinism or Free Will.
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