Total Members Voted: 15
Oop, thanks for moving it Rocket.
If you're an atheist, there's determinism.If you're not an atheist, you're, you know. Wrong.
How do you mean? Like I wouldn't kill myself (theoretically) because of certain factors?
Quote from: challengerX on December 26, 2014, 05:31:46 PMHow do you mean? Like I wouldn't kill myself (theoretically) because of certain factors?If free will is true, you could commit suicide of your own choice.If determinism is true, your suicide would have been already decided before you even thought of the act.
Quote from: D4C on December 27, 2014, 12:37:24 AMQuote from: challengerX on December 26, 2014, 05:31:46 PMHow do you mean? Like I wouldn't kill myself (theoretically) because of certain factors?If free will is true, you could commit suicide of your own choice.If determinism is true, your suicide would have been already decided before you even thought of the act.What's even more interesting is that if the universe were deterministic, your suicide would have been decided at the moment the universe came into existence. And with sensitive enough means of measurement, one could examine your suicide to understand literally every piece of information in existence.
Quote from: Auld Lang Turkey on December 27, 2014, 12:46:45 AMQuote from: D4C on December 27, 2014, 12:37:24 AMQuote from: challengerX on December 26, 2014, 05:31:46 PMHow do you mean? Like I wouldn't kill myself (theoretically) because of certain factors?If free will is true, you could commit suicide of your own choice.If determinism is true, your suicide would have been already decided before you even thought of the act.What's even more interesting is that if the universe were deterministic, your suicide would have been decided at the moment the universe came into existence. And with sensitive enough means of measurement, one could examine your suicide to understand literally every piece of information in existence.Yup. While I believe space is too chaotic for determinism to exist except possibly to an extent on a large scale, I prefer the concept of determinism. It may sound weak-willed, but the concept of every action you make already being written in history (past and present) makes it a lot easier to not overly dwell on mistakes.
Quote from: Verbatim on December 26, 2014, 04:44:19 PMIf you're an atheist, there's determinism.If you're not an atheist, you're, you know. Wrong.What about "God's plan"? Wouldn't that imply that events are set in stone to some extent
Quantum indeterminance is a thing. The building blocks of reality follow an uncertain, stochastic, probability distribution and cannot be described deterministically. The basis of our memories and reactions to stimuli are electrons (energy) flowing through our nervous system; these are the very same particles that carry an inherent uncertainty. Maybe this uncertainty leads to a Schrodinger's-cat-type situation whenever a decision is needed, and some mechanism allows us to override data and conditions that would otherwise lead to a predetermined outcome.I dunno. Thats a super interesting line of discussion, to me. Too often these conversations are wrought with free will being relegated to the unscientific or the religious, when the reality is that the idea of a purely deterministic universe is outdated as far as hundred years since the first inklings of errors in quantum mechanics.
Quote from: D4C on December 27, 2014, 12:34:27 AMQuote from: Verbatim on December 26, 2014, 04:44:19 PMIf you're an atheist, there's determinism.If you're not an atheist, you're, you know. Wrong.What about "God's plan"? Wouldn't that imply that events are set in stone to some extentWell, sure, if one believes in that sort of thing. By "wrong," I'm referring to religion as a sort of catch-22: If you believe you have free will and are religious, you're wrong. If you believe in determinism and are religious... I mean, you're right about determinism, but the religious angle taints it, so it's still wrong. (If you don't know how to divide polynomials, but you somehow got the correct answer anyway... you still don't know how to divide polynomials. So, I mean, what good does that do you?)And in my experience, most people who claim to be religious also seem to think that their god does indeed give them free will (even though he apparently has a "plan"--yep, Christianity is riddled with contradictions. Who knew?)So yeah, either way, everyone's gonna have their own interpretations of their religion--but it doesn't matter, because religion is bullshit.But that is a good point to bring up.