I mentioned it because you seem to regard natural selection as the sole explanation of evolution.
Well it isn’t, technically. I just didn’t see where the distinction was relevant, but I have a disease where I can’t avoid responding to what people write, so if that’s something you want to chat about, go ahead, I’m at your mercy, so to speak.
Even if you want to talk about I.D. I don’t think it would matter much to the meat of what we’re going over.
tonyrey:
Or absurd! Reductive materialism is self-contradictory because reasoning is self-referential whereas the movement of electrons is not.
And yet, if we remove electrons from the process, that self-referential awareness goes away, never to return. Simplicity begats complexity all over nature, I don’t see why it would not be the case here as well.
An atom bumping into another atom eventually translates into 1.19 x 10^57 atoms in an isolated orb of energetic particals ejecting radiation over vast distances that is then taken in by another group of atoms on a larger substrate that turns the energy into a self replicating engine capable of endless adaptation. Or, sunshine makes the trees grow.
People seem fine with that level of complexity being natural, and it is all based on ‘simple’ chemistry. I find it no more absurd to think the mind is also goverened by the same processes.
If you want something trippy to think about, imagine what the universe looks like from my perspective, since my matter isn’t any different than the matter of the rest of the universe. If I let my mind wander, it occurs to me that the universe is a conscious entity by virtue of my own mind. Things like that are an outlet for my own sense of awe.
tonyrey:
If we have no control over our conclusions the probability of discovering the truth is negligible because there are countless ways of being mistaken but as a rule only one way of being right!
Indeed!
Although, as in evolution, our methods are always being refined, are they not? I’m positive that we’re totally wrong about many of the things we think are truths. But I’m also almost as positive that we’re more right today then we were when Plato was around.
tonyrey:
So you think free will is a myth?
In a technical sense? Yes. In a practical, useable sense? No. In my daily life I act as though free will exists because I can’t track the variables. It does make a difference in some choices I make, but I don’t dwell on the vast gears of the universe methodically grinding away as I ponder what to cook for dinner.
tonyrey:
It is possible because the brain is the instrument not the instrumentalist.
If we’re going to run with that analogy, that would be like saying that if you intend to play song A someone can
make you play song B by tinkering with your guitar. I don’t see how that works.
tonyrey:
That is like saying a driver is more likely to be free to choose where to go if he doesn’t have a car or other form of transport!
I like this analogy.
The direct analogy you made only makes sense if you assume a driver exists though.
Right now we’re in a situation where we can’t see the driver, we can only see the car. We can observe that when we tweak the engine, the car travels to different destinations depending on the type of tweaking. Many assume there is a driver, but I’m arguing that if there were a driver the car would at least attempt to travel to the same destination, regardless of what we did to the engine. If a car is headed towards the edge of a cliff I wouldn’t expect that some prozac in the gas tank would make it turn around and go home instead, and I wouldn’t expect the car at home to head towards the cliff with the addition of ethanol.
That may be straining an analogy though, haha.
tonyrey:
The intangibility of our mental faculties and our control of events.
By intangibility you mean your perception that we cannot see materialistic cause, right? And our control of events is free will?
The problem is both of those things assume your premise, do you see what I mean?
tonyrey:
You would make no effort to control yourself - and always do what comes naturally!
What would the look like though? Social animals seem to do fin in their herds without going bonkers. What is it about humans that is currently ‘un-natural’? To me it looks like we have the same natural drives as any other critter, we’re just a lot smarter.
tonyrey:
How do you know decisions occur in the brain? Can you locate them? Which part of the brain is responsible for its activity as a whole?
Proponderence of evidence and a lack of superior explanatory theories.
There does not seem to be any part of the brain responsible for the activity of the whole, although certainly different areas are responsible for different things, some of which you might consider more important than others. Some of this stuff is
crazy! For example, one side of the brain can figure out math, but the other side of the brain can’t, or that patients could be shown a word on a screen and be unable to say what the word was, or acnkowledge that they knew what the word was, but when asked to write the word they could (speech and writing are on different sides of the brain). Crazy, crazy stuff.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split-brain
tonyrey:
A pattern is determined whereas freedom is the power of self-determination.
I know you think that is true, but I’m trying to see if there is a reason to think so.
tonyrey:
So without the power to choose we cannot be rational…
I’d put this under the technical/practical umbrella. I’d agree, if you want to reduce it enough the word rational becomes meaningless.
tonyrey:
Even a positive programme leaves no scope for freedom.
Again, if I want to be reductionist I’d agree with you. I just don’t see it as a negative.
tonyrey:
What enables us to model reality?
Our brains.