{split from Holy mother of awesome - galaxies collide} Woops, missed a few of the first posts. But I'm tired so it's ok.
If you think about it harder, you'll reason yourself out of it. Then you'll have a laugh.Originally Posted by pocketfours
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04-25-2008 06:09 PM
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04-25-2008 08:55 PM
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04-25-2008 10:02 PM
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Interesting thoughts on free will. I am like 99% certain that we are the only species that will sacrifice our life for the life of someone not related to us. | |
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04-25-2008 10:18 PM
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04-25-2008 10:57 PM
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personally i think the idea of no free will is awesome. i found peace in realizing that i couldn't blame my misfortune or thank my fortune on religious deities, and i like the idea that there is no free will. however, postulating there is no free will is basically postulating nothing. there is no way we can know one way or the other so its kinda pointless other than to provide some kind of psychological comfort or something. |
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04-25-2008 11:05 PM
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pocketfours I agree with you about us not having free will, however you make some really atrocious arguments. Youve confused evolution with the chemistry that makes us tick. If we are to believe that we simply are a complex series of chemical reactions than evolution plays no part in our destiny since it too is predetermined by this endless set of reactions. | |
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04-25-2008 11:57 PM
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04-26-2008 01:36 AM
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04-26-2008 02:22 AM
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04-26-2008 02:26 AM
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04-26-2008 02:31 AM
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04-26-2008 02:42 AM
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04-26-2008 02:54 AM
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Well if you think about evolution people only think about the good outcomes. | |
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04-26-2008 03:01 AM
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What was the particle flow that left you with such a limiting outlook on life? My framework for approaching the world gives me many more possibilities, choices and options. Even if there was no free will, simply seeing these possibilities means that I could take one of them. Have you ever just had a craving pop in your head and you search endlessly through the grocery store only to decide to eat something you've never tasted before? I have. I did it a few days ago with some orange flavored chocolate. How did that day's stimulus differ from the time previous when I maybe settled on something healthier? Even if it is a set of processes in my head which dictated what I did, I can influence those processes. I can set out to change my tastes. When I needed to diet, I realized what it was that my mind was doing when I would over-eat. I would always be tasting food, trying to think about what I would enjoy eating. Now I realize that I need to check my stomach to see if it's full, if not I'm not hungry. I took it upon myself to restructure my world and I went about and did it. That means my brain decide it wasn't operating appropriately and it took it upon itself to alter its own structure to suit my arbitrary list of needs. | |
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04-26-2008 06:19 AM
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I thought I'd throw this in there. There was some historical guy in physics (I think, might have been some other field) who proposed the following to think about: what if everything in our universe was "reset" to say October 23, 2008 at 12:30 PM EST. By reset, I mean every single bit of everything was placed back exactly like it was when that moment passed, and every particle and sub-particle had the same position and motion and whatnot. The question is, would everything after that proceed like it has? | |
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04-26-2008 12:54 PM
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I really appreciate your thoughts 'rilla. | |
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04-26-2008 01:02 PM
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clif notes? | |
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04-26-2008 01:19 PM
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04-26-2008 01:21 PM
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Question: | |
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04-26-2008 01:28 PM
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rilla my point about a square root in an equation is that there would not be one answer, I guess I was kinda trying to hint at parrallel universes. A kind of combination of free-will and everything being predetermined in the sense that everytime therei s a choice to be made it could be represented by an equation that resulted in the square root of a positive number. Of course there cant be two choices, so what happens to the other correct solution to the equation? Idk... Im just kinda rambling on an abstract thought. | |
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04-26-2008 01:59 PM
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I also don't think humans have free will. BUT, I think that fact is utterly meaningless. We feel like we have free will and we will never (and I'm saying never) be able to measure all the variables in the human brain such that we can accurately predict all future actions and decision-making. There are just too many variables at the cellular and circuit levels for us to accurately measure and model. However, we can already predict simple decision-making in monkeys and even influence it with tiny, well-placed electrodes. A friend of mine does this kind of research and it is awesome, but scary. | |
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04-26-2008 02:06 PM
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04-26-2008 02:19 PM
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04-26-2008 02:21 PM
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04-26-2008 02:33 PM
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04-26-2008 03:25 PM
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ya and how would we know that the machine is wrong, that it really doesnt have free will? Even if we did know this, I dont see how it relates to providing an answer to whether we have free will. | |
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04-26-2008 03:54 PM
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04-26-2008 04:18 PM
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rilla: I lost you a few places, but I think you're suggesting that we're going to figure out enough about the brain to "prove" that we have free will and explain how it works? I think the opposite will happen. The more we study decision-making, the more we'll see that brain activity predictive of the action we're planning precedes the conscious thought. Researchers will be able to predict decisions before you even make them. Some of these experiments have already been done: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Libet | |
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04-26-2008 07:51 PM
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04-26-2008 07:55 PM
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04-26-2008 08:21 PM
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04-26-2008 08:30 PM
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04-26-2008 08:36 PM
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04-26-2008 08:53 PM
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What value is a morally righteous act if there is no such thing as free-will? |
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04-26-2008 09:01 PM
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I'm glad this got split from the galaxies discussion |
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04-26-2008 09:59 PM
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04-26-2008 11:21 PM
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04-26-2008 11:25 PM
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04-26-2008 11:46 PM
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the whole discussion of free will, though a fascinating subject, is pointless. It is always debated because there is an inherent circularity that means that no answer will be sufficient. It is the old homunculus all over again. every description of 'free will' at some point has someone stating that "they" decided X. What "they" is uncertain. How they know that "they" decided it is also not clear. How they manage to differentiate themselves from their brains is also not certain. |
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04-26-2008 11:50 PM
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04-27-2008 01:24 AM
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04-27-2008 01:49 AM
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rillas drunk everybody. put everything on hold till he gets his sobriety sorted out. |
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04-27-2008 06:05 AM
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i misread the thread and initially thought someone was giving away a free Wii, but this is better. | |
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04-27-2008 09:16 AM
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04-27-2008 09:23 AM
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04-27-2008 11:14 AM
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04-27-2008 11:25 AM
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04-27-2008 12:28 PM
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04-27-2008 02:08 PM
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We're not talking about anything exactly. | |
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04-27-2008 02:35 PM
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What I'm saying is that the brain can't control any of its particles. It goes like this: | |
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04-27-2008 02:55 PM
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The brain has no central processor. There is no great decision making unit. There are many specialized processors which work in series and in parallel. Though no element can control their particles, the system can control its elements and that's where free will comes from. | |
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04-27-2008 03:27 PM
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04-27-2008 03:32 PM
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meh, youre both making horrible arguments imo. Like its been said before the arguments a cyclical. Rilla your last post is completely self dependent, you cant define a word by using the word in the definition. | |
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04-27-2008 03:37 PM
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04-27-2008 03:40 PM
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04-27-2008 04:01 PM
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04-27-2008 04:07 PM
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It was really wierd, when I read the beginning of this discussion I wanted to do something random like bang my hand on the table for no apparent reason and then i realised that was exactly how i was always going to react.... Now i'm mindfucked | |
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04-27-2008 04:08 PM
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04-27-2008 04:12 PM
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04-27-2008 07:21 PM
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like i said before, i basically disagree with both sides. i am positive it is impossible to know one way or the other. |
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04-27-2008 08:04 PM
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04-27-2008 09:04 PM
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04-27-2008 09:12 PM
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05-01-2008 12:32 PM
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I don't believe in free will. A neuroscientist in the 80s (Benjamin Libet) did an experiment where he measured brain activity while people made 'free' choices. I don't remember all the details, but it was some simple task like pressing one of two buttons. Then he asked them to estimate when they'd made the choice. Anyways, the basic finding was that the frontal cortex had an increase in activity shortly before the subjects felt they had made their decision. | |
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05-01-2008 12:53 PM
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i had to | |
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05-01-2008 12:55 PM
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i had to | |
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05-01-2008 01:22 PM
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05-01-2008 07:07 PM
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05-01-2008 08:18 PM
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this is getting zomgheadhurting |
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05-01-2008 08:56 PM
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I just dont understand. How can there be laws to predict the transfer of ideas? The transferring of an idea is done most commonly by sentences and not all sentences are de-constructed in your mind the same way. The deeper structure of anything I'm trying to say is almost never precisely transfered. It's like compressing a file, transferring it to you and having you decompress it with some losed elements and some replaced elements. And sometimes, not even accurately. | |
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05-01-2008 09:45 PM
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05-01-2008 09:54 PM
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ive thought tonnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnns about this, and this is what ive realized: | |
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05-02-2008 05:13 AM
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i have free will; i shall do as i feel. |
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05-02-2008 11:03 AM
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there are interesting experiments done on split brain patients (corpus callosum is severed), where they were given a command such as stand up and go to the fridge, but only to 1 side of the brain. They would get up, and when asked why, would respond that they were thirsty. |
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05-25-2008 08:27 PM
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its observations like this (along with general pyschology) that makes me think free will is extremely over rated by common snese. |