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| Re: Do humans actually have free will? Quote:
And I would not count out the lowly worm. They may not look like they're built for speed. They don't come with a fancy paint job and racing stripes, but they get there, and they carry the earth upon their backs when the do. They never fly except in the belly of a bird, but no matter how great the empire is in its day, at some point, its history will be buried in worm ****. |
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| Re: Do humans actually have free will?
'Freedom', 'free-will', 'choice', 'Jesus', 'autonomy', etc... are all predominately emotionally/egoically based 'beliefs'. For those who need to believe in such, it is 'real' for them, in their world-views, in their lives. Argumentation is fruitless. They 'know' better. The 'evidence' of their perceptions (naive realism) is sufficient. For those who don't need to 'believe', these concepts remain nonsense, fantasy. The relevency of science showing these things to be illusion is irrelevent to the 'believers', and justification/support for those who don't. Those who 'believe' have no choice but to 'believe' and those who do not, likewise, at any particular moment. |
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| Re: Do humans actually have free will? Quote:
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| Re: Do humans actually have free will? Quote:
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| Re: Do humans actually have free will? So are you saying that no one is free, and no one is not free? We are all equally free in every aspect? Why do we have the word "free" if it doesn't describe anything? ![]() Unless you're saying that it describes a concept, and that concepts don't exist outside of the mind? But certainly it's a concept that directly applies to real life.....? |
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| Re: Do humans actually have free will?
G'day all. This is my first venture into any specific forum. I'm not sure what a discussion about "free will" is doing in Epistemology, but whatever the basis of its categorisation, the matters under consideration remain the same. I read all the posts since Peter Damian's initial entry and wondered if it might be possible to make some sort of concise listing of just what are the points of contention? Failing that, perhaps we could review just what is being referred to when the term 'will' is being used. I notice, what seem to me to be, two distinctly different applications: i). As included in Fido's post of Nov. 29; "Will is just a force". Here 'will' is used to refer to the dynamic nature of an action. Thus there may be reference to 'strong' or 'weak' will. In any event it would seem to generally be used in the sense of an individual trait or characteristic, and not something to which constraint (or lack of it) would normally be considered to apply. Thus one might exhibit strength of will (or not), but there could hardly be said to be any external constraints such as would make it appropriate to question whether or not it was 'free'. ii). Elsewhere in the various posts it would seem that 'will' is used in the sense of 'choice'; i.e. the question is whether or not one is free to choose (cf. Aristoddler's post, Aug. 26). For now, I will take it that what is at question is, the extent to which people may be said to be free to choose. In this context some salient points have been made, that seem to have at their core the following concerns: i). What is meant by 'free' in this context? ii). What are the implications of having 'free will'? ii). What are the implications of not having 'free will'? However there seems to have been little if any consideration of what it is that surely underpins the whole issue: What is it to be a human being? What is there, amongst that of which we are aware, that may be irrefutably be demonstrated to be an entity that exercises choice/will however constrained? In short, is our consciousness causal (deterministic) or consequential (i.e. symptomatic)? Is it perhaps, both consequential and causal, being part of the ebb-and-flow, the flux of energy-states that constitute that which we call The Universe? Yeh, well just a few thoughts.
__________________ His hands were pure; but he had no hands. |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - GridLok for the above post! | ||
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| Re: Do humans actually have free will? Quote:
From there we could debate forever over how much of life is "caused" and how much is "freely-willed", but I have to say that I see both plainly at work in humanity... Well done, in my opinion. |
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| Re: Do humans actually have free will? Quote:
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One who understands this doesn't get frustrated at others (or self), doesn't get angry at others (or 'self'), there is no blame, no punishment, no retribution, no guilt, no judgement... all the little 'happy things' that some 'perspectives' bring. Instead of spending money to punish people who cant behave nicely in society, perhaps we can 'cure' them, re-educate them, and if not, keep them segregated from society, humanely. Quote:
For me, there is no such thing as 'free-will' or 'choice' (neither blame nor punishment, etc..). This is also 'my reality'; not 'right', not 'wrong', but simply as 'created'. Both of us are the fabrication of memory, neither is 'righter nor wronger' (but by pride and ignorance) than the 'other'. |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - nameless for the above post! | ||
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| Re: Do humans actually have free will? Our concepts, which is all memory, has whatever 'meaning' that is applied (inherent), all the 'Being' that we can know. Quote:
Freedom = choices. There are none (choices/options) but as a 'belief' or an 'illusion'. I see the illusion, I do not 'believe' in it's 'reality'. Others do. All the various perspectives are what give depth and breadth to the illusion/dream of 'life'. Quote:
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No 'concept' is the 'thing' (unless it's a 'concept' of a 'concept'?), a 'memory' is a 'memory', nothing more. There is no evidence of anything 'more'. |
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