The rap music came up, the pop music came up, the cobain came up.Redingold said:What? What are you on about?Skullkid4187 said:yup....i call it The 90's!Redingold said:Any more?Skullkid4187 said:Hmmmmmm....nope don't think it does anymore.
You mean there was a time when it did, and then something happened and nobody could make decisions after that?
Explain yourself.
And this destroys free will because...?Skullkid4187 said:The rap music came up, the pop music came up, the cobain came up.Redingold said:What? What are you on about?Skullkid4187 said:yup....i call it The 90's!Redingold said:Any more?Skullkid4187 said:Hmmmmmm....nope don't think it does anymore.
You mean there was a time when it did, and then something happened and nobody could make decisions after that?
Explain yourself.
people started hating! and then depression came.Redingold said:And this destroys free will because...?Skullkid4187 said:The rap music came up, the pop music came up, the cobain came up.Redingold said:What? What are you on about?Skullkid4187 said:yup....i call it The 90's!Redingold said:Any more?Skullkid4187 said:Hmmmmmm....nope don't think it does anymore.
You mean there was a time when it did, and then something happened and nobody could make decisions after that?
Explain yourself.
You didn't read the OP did you....Generic Gamer said:Of course we have free will, we can choose to counteract almost everythign we do if we want.
heredity and environmentGeneric Gamer said:Of course we have free will, we can choose to counteract almost everythign we do if we want.
I think GG has hit the nail on the head here, the theory is deliberately unprovable, or at least only provable through circular logic that states since you made x decision instead of y or z, you were always going to make x decision.Generic Gamer said:Gaz6231 said:Counteracting something means you never did what you were going to do, therefore you were never going to do it.Generic Gamer said:Of course we have free will, we can choose to counteract almost everythign we do if we want.
Pre-determinism - 1.
It's a theory and not even a particularly good theory, it's deliberately unprovable.
I like the way you put 'Actual Science'. In truth, 'Science' is more like 'Actual Philosophy'Generic Gamer said:Yes I did, I'm just looking at it from the angle of actual science.Daffy F said:You didn't read the OP did you....Generic Gamer said:Of course we have free will, we can choose to counteract almost everythign we do if we want.
OT: I've been studying Philosophy for a while, but I haven't learned about this yet. We did touch on this with the idea of God section of the course, and are scheduled to start 'Free will and determinism' next term. It does sound interesting, although I don't like the idea of having no free will myself...
I'll not say any more apart from this fun fact - A man in America once avoided the Death Penalty by using the argument that, as we have no free will, he was going to end up murdering either way.
Instead of finding my first post and insinuating I'm stupid, why don't you then read my other posts. It's two pages, there's no real reason not to.
Unless you didn't want a discussion, you wanted to be right.
How has it been 'shown' may I ask?Generic Gamer said:Thing is that it's not a philosophical question, whether everything is pre-determined is more of a mathematical question and the answer has been shown to be 'no'.Daffy F said:I like the way you put 'Actual Science' in truth, 'Science' is more like 'Actual Philosophy'
But you only counteracted it because something made you feel like you should counteract it. So what you did was still just the product of predictable circumstances. You're still being controlled by your stimuli. Human behavior is as logical and constant as gravity.Generic Gamer said:Of course we have free will, we can choose to counteract almost everythign we do if we want.
Really? That seems like a total miscarriage of justice to me. How could he have possibly won that appeal?Daffy F said:I'll not say any more apart from this fun fact - A man in America once avoided the Death Penalty by using the argument that, as we have no free will, he was going to end up murdering either way.
I've fasted and pulled all nighters. And we've all been in a situation where we've post-poned going to the bathroom...For example, someone goes to the theater and orders a large coke. He finds he showed up way early--the previews haven't even started. Absent-mindedly, he continues to drink it. The movies about to start, and the cup is already empty. He quickly grabs a refill and enjoys his second large coke during the movie. Near the end, he needs to go to the bathroom...but the movie is so good! Despite how uncomfortable it is, he waits through the movie and goes afterwards.minemin said:But let's think this out a bit:do we do anything out of free will?Take for example all the little things you do in your daily life like eating and sleeping and...going to the bathroom.Do we consider those to be out of free will?If free will does exist,then we should be able to have it in every moment of our life.
That is all.
Agreed. If the judge had the slightest modicum of intelligence, he'd have claimed that they couldn't make the choice not to execute him.Bullfrog1983 said:Really? That seems like a total miscarriage of justice to me. How could he have possibly won that appeal?Daffy F said:I'll not say any more apart from this fun fact - A man in America once avoided the Death Penalty by using the argument that, as we have no free will, he was going to end up murdering either way.