nerdsamwich said:
Captain Blackout said:
nerdsamwich said:
I choose not to believe in time travel of any sort(including prophecy) because it invalidates free will. If it is possible to travel from future to past, or even just to view the future, then the future has already happened, and is even more inevitable than paper burning in fire. Of course, I may believe in free will precisely because the course of history is already set in stone, but if that's the case it doesn't matter what I think because it's all predetermined anyway.
Pre-determination does not invalidate free will. The future may well be set in stone, but if so, it is because of the choices we will make freely.
Speaking of paradoxes...how do you figure we have a choice if the choices are already made? That's like the Ford advertisement that the Model T comes in any color you want, as long as it's black.
Not quite. The Model T example proposes that other options don't exist.
Tomorrow I may have any number of things for breakfast. I will probably have frosted flakes. Let's say I will. If someone went into the future, saw my breakfast, wrote it down on a piece of paper and left it for me to find the paper and my choice will always agree. It will still be my choice. The truth of the statement "you had frosted flakes" on the paper is made so by what I did.
Think about it: How many "choices" do you make where you would have done the same thing presented with the same options every time? Blackjack is a great example. Against a dealer's 6 I will always split double 8s. It's my choice, but I'll do it every time. How many more choices in your life are like this? For most people, almost all of them.
The exercise of free will is a complex process. Often we have made our choices
long before they are actualized. We choose what kind of person we want to be, and then our day to day 'choices' are pre-programmed responses to our original choice.
Which means I now have a problem. In my first post I said that causality is not what it seems. In this post I invoke causality of choice to show how 'free will' is often pre-determined and to help explain how free-will and a knowable future are unrelated.
For a big f'ing cookie, just what is my philosophical stance?