That things happen - free will events as you’ve termed them for some reason - isn’t outright evidence that those events are scripted, as by an author.
i call them free will events because that is what we are refering to, you refered to them as being illusory. i am refering to the same thing you are.
and your right, there may not be an author, but then you are left with an even less satisfying position, namely that the script had no author and all these free will events are illusory and happening with such coherency for no reason at all.
which violates the PSR (principle of sufficient reason)
Whatsoever the case may be. For all intents and purposes, I have no reason to make that leap, given current scientific understanding.
thats because scientism, the idea that scientific understanding is the only method of seeking the truth, is a self refuting idea. a false logical contradiction. as demonstrated here
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-refuting_idea#Scientism
Scientism
The statement “no statements are true unless they can be proven scientifically”, is claimed to be self-refuting insofar as it cannot be proven scientifically; the same goes for essentially similar views like “no statements are true unless they can be shown empirically to be true”.[29] (This kind of issue was a serious problem for logical positivism).
scientism is a faith, even worse it is a faith in an idea that is self refuting.
I agree. Which is why I’m not going to plug a creator in there, because there’s no way to confirm it. I’m not saying science doesn’t know so I’m disconfirming something. I’m saying there’s no current understanding that would lead me to believe an author was behind the events that are happening right now.
the idea of confirmation that you are refering to is also a logical contradiction
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-refuting_idea#Verification-_and_falsification-principles
Verification- and falsification-principles
The statements “statements are meaningless unless they can be empirically verified” and “statements are meaningless unless they can be empirically falsified” are both claimed to be self-refuting on the basis that they can neither be empirically verified nor falsified[31]
the appropriate test for truth is logic, not these self refuting ideas. they are false becasue they are logical contradictions
what we are trying to point out to you, is that the mode of thinking you are currently accepting as truth, or a standard by which truth can be measured, is false.
Free will being an illusion might only be evidence of design if you thought for some arbitrary reason that there was a designer; there’s no logical connection supporting that idea though.
we dont need to assume a designer first, as i just have, we can point that ‘illusory free will’ implies one pretty strongly.
I don’t understand the need for this kind of framing. It’ as simple as this: behaviour is predictable because, when we know the variables, we can predict behaviour.
your assuming that you can know all the variables. you cant, unless you assume they are all phyical in nature, whcih as i just demonstrated form free will, you cant.
after all, free will isnt compatible with either possible state of the universe.
What you’re trying to establish is that behaviour can be predictable (rational) and free at the same time. There’s no reason to suppose that this is the case though. It’s more likely that if you can predict something, it was caused (something causes people to act time and again in a predictable way, and so on).
I’ll agree with you about this: all of those options would have been available to you in that situation,… Whatever the case, you didn’t ask to be placed into your biological frame or the environment that taught you.
if people were deterministic systems themselves, sure. but then we are back to the implications outlined above. it is either a universe designed from the first state, or its completly random, and somehow the illusory free will is completely coherent anyway .
as though you were recieving random static on your TV, but it was actually showing you the olympics. surely that would get your attention, no?
point being that people arent simply deterministic robots. unless they were designed that way…
not something most atheists would agree with.
That willingness, too, is determined.
sure it could be.
Nothing about you is outside the system - outside the physical laws that were present when what made you up began.
this is what we disagree on, for me, our free will shows that we are not deteministic in nature. we actually have free will. the opposite argument, the one we just discussed still implies a designer.
either way, we wind up implying a designer. the only out is to make a ridiculous claim about random causes for the coherent interaction of peoples free will and the universe.
The particles were in motion since the beginning of time (not of your doing), and just because you can experience it doesn’t mean you have a say in the matter.
there is no such thing as time, but that aside, if the universe is closed and deterministic you would be right, and still wind up implying a designer.
so if free will is an illusion or not, it implies a designer.
unless you care to bit ethe bulloet and call it random. but i think its clear that is the least palateble option for either of us.