T
tonyrey
Guest
I am referring to the likelihood of emergence in all possible universes. They need not all be rational, comprehensible universes.tonyrey
Are you arguing that rationality cannot be fundamental because many possible universes lack rationality ? If rationality is fundamental to this universe it is fundamental regardless of what could have been the case.In this case, where so many other universes are not like that, rationality and comprehensibilty would be incidental – it clearly cannot be a fundamental aspect of universes if so many permutations lack that structure.
to have a rational foundation. There are countless possible comprehensible universes but a far more limited number of comprehensible ones - and still fewer which contain minds which comprehend them.If you win the lottery, does that make you suspect it was rigged in your favor? By your measure, here, it would, it** must.** You have conflated incidence with necessity.The comprehensibility of the universe in itself is evidence that it is **more likely **
A false assertion. I specified “more likely”, not “must be”!.
Winning a lottery ticket has nothing to do with rationality and the success of science. No one knows the source of reality but we do know that a universe must have a highly specific type of order if it is to be intelligible and provide a basis for rational beings to exist.** In the absence of further information **it is extremely likely that this universe has a rational source. There are immensely more ways in which this universe could be so disorderly that a rational existence is impossible.It might be that your winning lottery ticket was a matter of chance, and your winning would not be an indicator that there was a “lottery design” in your favor. You have noted that you have an intelligent mind comprehending an intelligible universe, and concluded that the lottery was rigged in your favor. You don’t know the odds, you can’t see the metaphysics, you don’t know scratch about the real dynamics that obtain, but yet, a hunch is enough.
I don’t think I’d jump to any conclusion from that. From what you’ve provided, I have no basis to conclude anything at all.You observe a strange being with a strange power on a strange planet which lacks that strange power. Would you jump to the conclusion that the strange being and the strange power have been produced by the strange planet?
Precisely.There is no prima facie evidence for emergence. The onus is on the emergentist to justify his theory.
Well, what yields choice A over choice B (and all other choices) as the result of premeditation? What differentiates “premeditation” from a random number generator, in other words? They appear to be synonyms for the same “black box” in your answers, here.You are neglecting self-determinism which has everything to do with a rational choice.Far from being a glaring contradiction it is the universal presupposition in every court of law that a person is the cause of his/her behaviour.
We choose according to what we consider more consistent with our values and purposes. Often we rely on intuition. Mechanical selection by neuronal processes may well have a element of randomness. It is certainly more akin to a black box than a conscious mind with insight and free will…
I am not alone in that view which is shared by the vast majority of civilised persons. Once again you are neglecting the possibility of an action being determined by the self. Your categories of causality are arbitrarily restricted to purposeless objects.You missed the fact that the buck stops with us - not with our heredity and environment.I’ve asked, repeatedly now, what did I miss?
They are directed towards a future state or event.If you say “purposeful objects” are a third class of cause, then how does that “third way” distinguish itself from a deterministic or random, or hybrid cause (law + chance)?
Unlike them you establish your own purposes.The computers in the next room to me right now are running a big simulation I started this morning, which will take all day. They have a purpose I have given them, programs I installed and kicked off to run the simulation.
Only because they have been programmed by a purposeful being.But their purpose is subordinate to mine – they have no say in the matter, or any consciousness to say anything at all. But they operate toward an end, a purpose, deterministically.
Your concept of a cause is retrospective, i.e. a past event or state. It needs to be supplemented by a cause which is prospective, i.e. a future event or state. An adequate explanation takes the entire process into account, the end result as well as the starting point. It is like going down a road into what has happened and completely ignoring the significance of what lies ahead if you turn round and look forwards. Otherwise your view of causality is unbalanced and gives you a distorted view of reality, depriving it of rhyme or reason, value or purpose. Life is more than a simulation…I point that out by way of illustrating that “purpose” itself doesn’t detach a thing from causal influences for that purpose, necessarily. So if you say you have “uncaused purpose”, whence that purpose, again?