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| | #286 (permalink) |
| Luna tick | Re: Does free will exist? All good solid reason Peter but unfortunately none of them are proof, in fact some of them are beliefs and that leads us to less solid ground. I'm sure I could come up with convoluted (and possibly flawed) arguments as to why these statements aren't true, or at least are fallible, but I'm choosing not to. Last edited by Moonbat; 29th February 2012 at 05:10 PM. Reason: added (and possibly flawed) |
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| | #287 (permalink) |
| This world is not my home | Re: Does free will exist? I am not sure we have to throw God into the mix to have this discussion about free will vs. determinism. Unless by "God" you mean "godlike." If I understand the prevailing evolutionary theory correctly you could make a pretty good case for evolution being the deterministic factor. In that scenario each of us is moving along the path which most likely allows us to pass our genes into the next generation. This makes evolution deterministic and on the macro level at least, no free will. We have generally been speaking on the micro level, "Do individuals have free will?" instead of asking the question on the macro level; "Does humanity have free will?" |
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| | #288 (permalink) |
| Run VT Erroll! Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Lancashire
Posts: 1,332
| Re: Does free will exist? What we do is goverened by our morals, our fears, our beliefs. By the time we are old enough to be capable of making concious decisions, our brains are already too filled with stuff to make any choice we make 'free'. |
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| | #289 (permalink) | |||||||
| only differs in your mind Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Arizona
Posts: 451
| Re: Does free will exist? Quote:
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| | #290 (permalink) | |
| Banishment this world! | Re: Does free will exist? Quote:
For instance, we could choose to murder someone, but if we did, there is a 99.9% chance we will likely be caught and punished for our crime. Most people, with the exception of the odd one, don't want to face the consequences of their actions, which means they couldn't choose to commit murder... so for them, there was no choice in the first place - it was already decided for them by the law. Another example: We can choose what careers to study towards at university, but very few people actually seem to end up working in those careers afterwards, yet you have to work to live, or if you don't work, then the government welfare systems will try to force you into any old job. They wanted to work a particular career, but the choice was taken away from them by economy/businesses/government. They ended up working in a job they had no choice but to take. And lastly - and please don't jump down my throat for mentioning it, it is just an example. if we wanted to take a religious view on the matter, specifically Christianity. The bible teaches there is heaven and hell, right? To get into Heaven you have to follow the laws set down by God, otherwise you might end up in hell. But since nobody really wants to go to hell (if they believe in heaven and hell), they have no choice but to follow God's laws. We have the ability to choose, but in the end it is taken away from us by laws. So my belief is that, psychologically, we have the ability to choose, but because we are told something is wrong to do, we don't make those choices, which means 'free will' is just something we like to believe exists. Last edited by Warren_Paul; 5th March 2012 at 01:19 AM. | |
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| | #291 (permalink) | |||||
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Cumbria
Posts: 1,603
| Re: Does free will exist? Hi Huttman, Quote:
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Regards, Peter | |||||
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| | #292 (permalink) |
| Destroyer of Words | Re: Does free will exist? I wonder if the Bible couldn't be viewed as a collection of ancient self-help books. I get a distinct feeling from the New Testament that there was a considerable amount of teaching and guidance that didn't make it to the final edit(s). That the OT God and his NT characterisation are different may derive from the needs of the Chosen People in their relevant eras. Perhaps, after the thousands of years of conflict, war and ethnic cleansing, someone thought it was time for a new mind-set. I think, though have no scholarly examples to explain why I think this, that the current collection of books should probably not be presented, as they are, within the covers of a single book. It has caused confusion. It's a little like asking people to accept that there is something mystical about the alphabet simply because dictionaries and encyclopaediae use it extensively to co-ordinate their explanations of life and understanding. What has happened, I suspect, is that some books have been compiled together which, for the most part, support each other and require little in the way of detailed explanation for the jist to be imparted. The books which have been left out, but which could have been included and perhaps should be included if we are to have a more rounded understanding of the times, are those most likely to highlight this or that apparent contradiction or confusion. The Koran appears to be different in one subtle respect: While the Bible is said to be a collection of writings by people who were "Inspired by the Holy Spirit" and collected together by a select committee similarly inspired, the Koran purports to be the Living Word of Allah. Incidentally, there are different versions of the Bible, including variations in translation, even among Christian communities, but that is more to do with freedom of speech than freedom of will, I suspect. Religious indoctrination, from whatever source, is guidance towards how to enjoy and experience life more fully and contentedly. But they aren't the only source of this kind of kindly suggestion. Right up to today there are authors who encourage us to turn our bad experiences around, to view them in a new perspective and to take hope from the trials under which we labour. Psychiatrists and psychologists try to help us analyse our decisions and to identify the ones which underpin our most regular habits, good and bad, and the similarities between stages of psychological analysis, self awareness, alchemical myth and spiritual enlightenment are, I think, astounding. Such contradictions as there are between them seem, to me, to be matters of opinion at best and interpretation at worst. The common ground that these all seem to occupy is that of encouraging us to exercise our free will, but to do so in the morally, ethically and prudently "right" way. The Bible directs us towards finding the Love of the Creator and applying that Love to every cell in our bodies and the prize is that we will become miracle-workers on Earth and live in Heaven after death. Isn't it interesting that what self-help books there are describe a very similar kind of injunction to locate the centres of our self-worth and, through this, exercise some kind of magical thinking enabling us to become healers and mind-readers. Psychic books tell us that the centre of our being is at the centre of the Universe where all consciousness meets. And Jung spoke just as loudly of the Common Unconscious as a psychological origin for consciousness. So, all along we are being told how to access freedom of will. Does this suggest we don't have it until we've jumped through the appropriate hoops? If we accept that most of our waking life is spent in some kind of day-dreaming state, whereby we perform familiar acts with repeatable subsets of actions, that we adopt and entrench habits that allow us to engage with Reality with the minimum of effort, that we rarely have cause to recall a specific event in a normal day and have to make anniversaries out of everything out-of-the-ordinary, then it seems that we show little sign of actually exercising freedom of will. But if we further accept that we are capable of reaching outside our containment areas of habit, ritual and mundanity as circumstances require or as intent to develop and progress demands, then it becomes clear that we are capable of stretching ourselves beyond our programming to a place where free will becomes more likely. Perhaps this is the conscious exercising of our consciousness. And perhaps it is a capability and not a given. Perhaps true Freedom of Will is not possible until we have explored the limitations within which our Will currently operates. I hope this isn't too rambling and incomprehensible, because I think I may actually be on to something here. Who'd 've thunk it...... ? |
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| | #293 (permalink) |
| This world is not my home | Re: Does free will exist? Not bad for an amateur theologian and philosopher. I would pick some with your view of how the Bible came to be and how it differs from the Koran, but your point about free will is well made and you might indeed be on to something. (Of course, I'm still going to believe you are wrong. ) |
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| | #295 (permalink) |
| only differs in your mind Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Arizona
Posts: 451
| Re: Does free will exist? You are, except the going to heaven part, as it's a little more in depth than an all encompassing thing. It's amazing what that (those) book(s) actually have in them once one dives into it. I'd love to share but this open forum might not be the best place because it would be off subject from the thread. Nice post, by the way. Hi Peter! I just wanted to make one last comment on your reaction to my previous post. The Proverbs I quoted are sound and reasonable advise as we make choices every day in our lives. E.g. what is the best way to go from point A to point B and avoid the heaviest traffic. If I'm wrong, forgive me, but I sense an animosity about the source of the example I gave. Basically, I look at it as choices in everyday life we make, that gives us free will. I can see and respect your view on the thread topic too, and there is soundness to it. I just don't feel confined by it if that were the case so it's really a non-issue for me, personally. I thank you for the past posts as it has given me more thinking material and I'm a thinker-oh how my head spins some times! Thanks again. -Norman |
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| | #296 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Cumbria
Posts: 1,603
| Re: Does free will exist? Quote:
My concern is with seeing the Bible as anything more than a collection of myths and stories. Very good myths and stories - just like the myths of the Norse gods or the Greek gods - but still only myths and stories. Myths hold a mirror up to us, but it is not necessary to argue that they are factually or historically accurate in order to take the message on board. To get back on topic, there was a terribly interesting programme about good and evil on Horizon the other night (BBC 4). I think it has particular relevance to the debate on free will. Did anyone see it? Regards, Peter | |
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| | #297 (permalink) | ||
| Lagomorphing | Re: Does free will exist? Quote:
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| | #298 (permalink) |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 12,138
| Re: Does free will exist? I think we may have been round this particular loop before. The assumption that seems to be being made is that just because one is unaware of how some (the vast majority?) of one's decisions are made (because they're made by one's subconscious), one hasn't made them. True, one may be said to have not made a conscious decision, but that's just building the expected answer in by manipulating the question. One, where one is the combination of all one's brain functions (conscious and unconscious), makes all those decisions, for good or ill, understandable or not. |
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| | #299 (permalink) |
| Lagomorphing | Re: Does free will exist? Yes, but I don't think anyone's ever argued that some outside agency makes the decisions for "one" (apart from as a point of unprovable theology). And you could say the same about a robot, but I don't think anyone would credit it with free will. Part of the point of my original post was to discuss the possible discrepancy between what drives our behaviour and what we believe drives our behaviour -- in other words, whether we are deluding ourselves as to how we work, surely an important question -- and whether scientific evidence exists to support that. It looks as though the Horizon programme will make some attempt to discuss that. |
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