Moderator: Only_Humean
Stoic Guardian wrote:Volchoks closedmindedness...



volchok wrote:lizbethrose wrote:
You think determinism is true and that it negates the idea of 'freedom of the will,'
No, I don't think determinism negates free will. Free will negates itself.
You cannot have free will in a random universe. Can you wrap your mind around that for once? I don't know how many times I have to repeat this: The whole determinism vs ramdomness debate is irrelevant in the discussion of free will.The question of 'free will' has been debated for centuries and it always seems to boil down to belief. Belief is belief and it's going to vary from person to person--it cannot be proven.
That's a semantics game.
It's a stupid philosophical little trick that forces you to be a relativist.
I got news for you, everything boils down to belief. Everything. It's just that some beliefs are based on evidence and reason and logic while others are based on faith.
lizbethrose wrote:
If determinism, causationism, consequentialism, naturalism--however you wish to label your philosophy (you never answered my question about that)--you feel that anyone's actions are inevitable. Does that or does that not make her/him guilty of criminal actions? You seem to dance around that question, imm. Yet is seems to be a pretty simple yes-no question to me. Is s/he guilty because of her/his actions, or is s/he innocent because the action was inevitable?
volchok wrote:iambiguous wrote:But at the exact moment when she had a "change of heart" the random event wasn't really random -- out of the blue -- at all, just an inherent manifestation of all the other events coinciding in a universe unfolding as, what, the cosmological rendition of clockwork?
If what you're saying is that causality still exists in a random world, then I think you're correct.
And the experience we have listening to sublime music or creating great art or enjoying a superb meal or exchanging agonies and ecstacies with others is just, what, more atoms and molecultes going about the business [obliviously] of being matter?
volchok wrote:As far as we can tell, absolutely. We've known that for quite some time now.
When matter somehow acquires the capacity to know itself as matter it becomes a kind of matter that presumably was not around for billions and billions of years.
volchok wrote:A different kind? Isn't it just insanely more complex?
But then to the best of my recollection you have already acknowledged something you don't know: Why does something exist instead of nothing? Why this something and not another? And how does everything there is come into existence out of nothing at all?
volchok wrote: You're right. I don't know. No one does. But we're getting closer to the answer although some would argue that we will never be able to comprehend it.
Rebirth is the punch line of our condemnation. We will come to existence again, completely ignorant of our last journey, and have the go through this experience over, and over and over again.
Are you aware of all "the billions of inputs" ? No.
iambiguous wrote:
Yes, but as far as we can tell there are still enormous gaps between what we think we know about these things and all that can possibly be known about them. In other words: what do we really know about them at all?
Think of the staggering gap between what we knew about the universe during the time of Aristotle and what we know about it now. And that includes the very big and the very small.
But it is complexity of a different kind.
In my view, we do not really know yet if we are getting closer and closer to asking the right questions. Thus the certainty displayed by folks like you is more psychological than anything else. You want the feeling of integration that comes from it.
Joe Schmoe wrote:EDIT:
I was being sarcastic. You contributed nothing. You displayed your closed mindedness.
Stoic Guardian wrote:I was being critical, i don't see how that autmoatically translates to closedmindedness

Joe Schmoe wrote:Stoic Guardian wrote:I was being critical, i don't see how that autmoatically translates to closedmindedness
Perhaps consider others with this in mind.
Stoic Guardian wrote:Theres a differance beween saying, "Thats not what I believe." and "This is from a differant school of thought so i don't even want to hear it."

volchok wrote:iambiguous wrote:
Yes, but as far as we can tell there are still enormous gaps between what we think we know about these things and all that can possibly be known about them. In other words: what do we really know about them at all?
Think of the staggering gap between what we knew about the universe during the time of Aristotle and what we know about it now. And that includes the very big and the very small.
So basically, you're going for a god of the gaps kind of argument?
We don't know everything yet, therefor everything is still possible.
Right...
But it is complexity of a different kind.
volchok wrote:What could this possible mean? It's not fundamentally different then what was here before. It's made of the same thing.
In my view, we do not really know yet if we are getting closer and closer to asking the right questions. Thus the certainty displayed by folks like you is more psychological than anything else. You want the feeling of integration that comes from it.
volchok wrote:The certainty that you talk about doesn't exist and that fact DOES NOT MEAN that you have to be a relativist, which is what you are.
volchok wrote:Furthermore what integration ? Are you serious? I'm saying that we are nothing special, that we don't even exist, that the self is a complete illusion, that there is no after life and I am certain of these things because they provide integration!?!?!?
volchok wrote:You're the one who believes that we exist, that we control our lives, that perhaps life goes on after death...all the supposedly good shit.
Give me a fucking break.
Joe Schmoe wrote:Stoic Guardian wrote:Theres a differance beween saying, "Thats not what I believe." and "This is from a differant school of thought so i don't even want to hear it."
Vok was in a discussion. All you did was insult someone and leave. If either of you were being closed minded, my money is on you. That is all.
Twist all you like.
volchok wrote:lizbethrose wrote:
If determinism, causationism, consequentialism, naturalism--however you wish to label your philosophy (you never answered my question about that)--you feel that anyone's actions are inevitable. Does that or does that not make her/him guilty of criminal actions? You seem to dance around that question, imm. Yet is seems to be a pretty simple yes-no question to me. Is s/he guilty because of her/his actions, or is s/he innocent because the action was inevitable?
Liz, I'm a naturalist. That's my philosophy. And as a naturalist I happen to think determinism is true but I recognize that determinism being true or not is irrelevant. All the illusions that I have talked about in this forum like free will, authorship, personal responsibility, altruism, these are all things that cannot exist in a random universe either.
Regarding the second part of your question, I cannot answer yes or no without defining first what being guilty means.
According to wikipedia, Guilt is the state of being responsible for the commission of an offense. In this sense no one is guilty because no one can or should be held responsible. In criminal law, being “guilty” of a criminal offense means that one has committed a violation of criminal law. In this sense, yes, they are guilty. We don't need to pretend that people have free will in order to be able to say that someone infringed the law in some way.
iambiguous wrote:
God? Not me. I'm just noting the potential for gaps in the knowledge we have about the matter in a smartphone and the matter in the minds that invent and manufacture it.
iambiguous wrote:
I don't know what it means. I just know it is not like any matter that ever came before it. And I suspect the gap between what you think you know about these things now and what the human species will know about them in, say, another thousand years is probably a lot wider than, say, you think?
Why are you getting flustered here?
volchok wrote:iambiguous wrote:God? Not me. I'm just noting the potential for gaps in the knowledge we have about the matter in a smartphone and the matter in the minds that invent and manufacture it.
Yes, I know you're not arguing for god, but you're using the same style of argument as the "god of the gaps" which is an obvious logical fallacy.
I don't know what it means. I just know it is not like any matter that ever came before it. And I suspect the gap between what you think you know about these things now and what the human species will know about them in, say, another thousand years is probably a lot wider than, say, you think?
volchok wrote:Yes. Clearly you don't know what you mean. But for the sake of argument, let's say that it is different. Free will is still an impossibility and the self is still an illusion. You're not even debating me here. You're debating yourself because you know that what I've been saying is in fact what the evidence shows and you're just trying to grab on to something even if it means that you have to jump trough a thousand hoops, contradict yourself a bunch of times and do mental gymnastics all day long.
Why are you getting flustered here?
volchok wrote:Because you were accusing me of being biased based on the implications of what I'm saying when if anything, what I've been saying causes confusion and distress.
volchok wrote:You, on the other hand, want to keep believing in things that are extremely unlikely, some of them demonstrably false, because you need the emotional comfort and cannot even imagine that things may not be what they seem.
iambiguous wrote:
What is logic when matter is able to configure itself into conflicting points of view about the precise nature of its applicability?
I'm just noting that until the gaps are closed you and I cannot really be absolutely certain about lots of things.
And yet somehow matter has, in turn, configured itself into emotional and psychological states that truly crave certainty about things like this.
But, again, it can also be truly comforting [regarding others] to know that none of this is really "our fault". That, in other words, we have as much personal responsibility in all of this as do the individual dominoes falling near the end of V For Vendetta. As far as they are concerned [not at all] the design could have been a hammer and sickle, a swastika or a dollar sign.
volchok wrote:Even though I truly believe that all these things that I've been discussing so far are in fact true, I find the whole thing depressing. Extremely depressing really. I would even go so far as to say that it is unbearable. I would be much easier for me to believe in the things you seem to believe. I'm not getting anything out of believing what I believe. I simply cannot lie to myself. Intellectual honesty is too important for me.

volchok wrote:Well, let me clarify something then. Even thought I truly believe that all these things that I've been discussing so far are in fact true, I find the whole thing depressing. Extremely depressing really. I would even go so far as to say that it is unbearable. I would be much easier for me to believe in the things you seem to believe. I'm not getting anything out of believing what I believe. I simply cannot lie to myself. Intellectual honesty is too important for me.
I just cannot claim that my consciousness is the "First Cause" of those actions.
Joe Schmoe wrote:[ Therefore, fuck honesty. Go for happiness.
BUFFALO wrote:
Still, there is a psychological price to be paid in accepting cold hard reality.
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot]