I just realized this was a pun:
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on July 29, 2015, 12:38:49 PMI just realized this was a pun:Gay. Wish my speakers weren't out. Apparently I'm missing some quaility content here.
The difference is that the one with free will has greater moral accountability for his or her actions,
Free will isn't contingent upon one's ability to distinguish it.
rather bound to a relatively strict set of decisions that we make subconsciously as a result of the sum of our experiences, genes, and environmental stimuli.
To which I'd argue free will therefore doesn't exist.
Well you're certainly free to do so.
Couldn't you just ask them to do something repugnant?I.e. "eat shit". The one with no free will would assumedly follow the order without question. The one with free will would ask why, try and worm out of it or outright refuse.
Quote from: SuperIrish on July 29, 2015, 01:51:46 PMCouldn't you just ask them to do something repugnant?I.e. "eat shit". The one with no free will would assumedly follow the order without question. The one with free will would ask why, try and worm out of it or outright refuse.Well, no, because the one without free will is programmed to act as if it does have free will.
How can this scenario exist if the thing we are trying to differentiate doesn't have a solid definition, and is hypothetically mimicable?
I didn't watch the vid because my speakers are out. But, it's something I've thought about before. I'm not exactly sure that we do have free will. Just a clever illusion.For example. Let's take the future. Let's presume that the future isn't decided yet, and therfore, logically speaking, every door is open. Every possibility for you exists but it hasn't happened yet. As soon as you make a choice, you set the ball rolling down a specific path of circumstances.But your choice, in turn, is given all of its weight and merit by circumstances beforehand. The person you are today, the way you think, your morals, how you were raised, and everything else, determines how you will act.So, while all the doors are always open to you, you're always going to travel down a set path because of who you are, which was predetermined by circumstances beyond your control. No matter what you choose, it's because of actions and experiences that push you a certain way, and while you think you always have the other option, you're always going to pick the path ahead of you that suits you best.I assum of course, that the video was adocating against free will, rather than for it.If it was, just ignore me.
Quote from: SuperIrish on July 29, 2015, 01:57:51 PMHow can this scenario exist if the thing we are trying to differentiate doesn't have a solid definition, and is hypothetically mimicable?The point of the thought experiment is to show that you cannot empirically demonstrate the existence of free will.
But with a rigged hypothetical scenario, yeah.
Quote from: SuperIrish on July 29, 2015, 03:55:24 PMBut with a rigged hypothetical scenario, yeah.How is it rigged? The entire scenario revolves around coming up with some method of empirically determining the existence of free will. There are no unnecessary roadblocks to that in the thought experiment.
If the person without free-will can perfectly mimic free will
Quote from: Rocketman287 on July 29, 2015, 01:37:00 PMFree WillYou don't have to capitalize free will. It won't send you to live in fire and agony if you write it normally.
Free Will