T
thecone137
Guest
Would the designer of the machine be the causal determiner of the machine’s activities?This doesn’t come close to answering the argument. I did not require omniscience [why you claimed omnipotence, I have no idea] for someone to completely explain the how the machine would function. This sufficient knowledge concerning when the machine would break down and the possible causes makes omniscience largely irrelevant.
What you are failing to establish is a logical connection between certain and sufficient knowledge and causation. The point I was making was that even if certain knowledge were theoretically possible, the level of certainty itself is not sufficient to create a causal connection. Suppose the “knower” accurately predicted for 1000 years precisely the output of the machine, would that mean a causal relationship existed between the knower and the machine, until, inexplicably, the knower erred and because they didn’t anticipate the tiny fast moving teapot, the causal relationship suddenly terminated? I doubt it. The knowledge of the causal relationship and the causal network are two very different entities and a causal relationship simply never existed. Knowledge of, even complete knowledge of, does not establish the causal connection and could very well be inert even when that knowledge is absolute. The burden is still on you to show how knowledge can possibly function causally.
Knowing the complete explanation of something is not the same as “being” the explanation of it.