T
tonyrey
Guest
That self-determinism is incompatible with determinism…Latin sponte: of one’s free will.
It means that we** think **we are controlling events but they are predetermined.If people really believe in determinism they become fatalists and tend to let things take their course.
Determinism does not mean, “The same thing will happen if do nothing, as if I do something.”
Are today’s standards superior to theirs?So you believe that people had no right to life because people did not recognise the right to life? That it was not wrong to kill people for entertainment?
Wrong by today’s standards, but not by the standards of the day.
So probably a certain number of cells are involved and they cause the choice? “The buck rests with them.”You believe a person is a collection of mental events. So choices are made either by all the mental events or some of them.
That’s true. It’s unlikely that every brain cell is involved in every decision. A choice is a mental event.
Because it does not account for the highest and most valuable aspects of reality.The likelihood of naturalism being true is diminishing steadily.
How so?
Please explain why it is impossible.Even if it were true - for which I keenly await your evidence - by this same logic, God and extracorporeal consciousness CANNOT exist.
Because similarity can be argued to be subjective but other physical facts cannot.Why is it irrelevant whether identicality, equality, numerical relations and physical constants existed before human beings existed? If they did exist they are not just concepts…
You may remember, your point was about similarity. I answered it so you came up with a different concept.
Please explain how physical constants are just concepts in the mind…I could answer this too, but you could then come up with dozens of concepts.
You are assuming that conscience has evolved due to its survival value and that good and evil exist only in the mind.Dogs do not make rational or moral choices.
Not moral, no - they’re not sufficiently evolved.
They are incapable of grasping abstract concepts like truth and are not regarded as responsible for their behaviour.How do you know they’re not rational?
Their “choices” are instinctive and not based on abstract reasoning.But yet again, you deflect from the original point, which was whether animals make choices. Not the basis for their choices, just whether they make them.
We make both those assumptions and both are objectively true. Our mental processes are evidence of the objective reality of our thoughts, feelings and decisions. We cannot make the **a priori **assumption that they are less real than physical objects like brain processes.How is it an extreme example when it is the basis of all our thinking. If we don’t know we are thinking why bother to think?
Well, as you insist on pursuing this for some reason: You know that you are thinking. That is all that you can ever absolutely know. HOWEVER, as I’ve said before, you have to make an assumption that the world is not a figment of your imagination, otherwise as you say, there’s no point.
The point is that the mechanistic biological-machine theory is an inadequate explanation of living organisms, let alone human beings.The urge to survive is not an arbitrary distinction.
We were talking about biological machines, then all of a sudden you were talking about automata.
Their lack of syntactic language with their limited range of behaviour is convincing evidence that they cannot grasp and relate abstract concepts like the “self” and “awareness”.Is there any evidence that computers are aware of themselves and their makers?
There is no evidence that computers are aware, of course. As for non-human biological machines the only evidence is anecdotal. There are experiments on chimps (Byrne, 1997, don’t know if there’s an online document.)
A conscious, rational, purposeful Being is clearly a more adequate explanation than processes which lack those powers. The immense richness, variety and value of life are far more likely to be due to Design than Chance and Necessity.Yet consciousness, intelligence and purpose are the factors which make human beings the highest form of known reality in the entire universe. Without them the amazing success of science would not have occurred. To dismiss them as fortuitous freaks of nature is a most inadequate explanation.
Why? And what better explanation is there? God? He may be an answer, but he’s not an explanation.
It is theoretically possible but extremely improbable.It has not been explained how and why emergence occurred.
No. Therefore it can’t have happened, right?
In that case morality must be based primarily on reason rather than emotion.Many people find it in their interest and are not bothered about their evolved morals.
That’s true. Not everybody is sane.
In that case it is a defective theory because morality is necessarily purposeful.It seems odd that morals benefit society but they have not evolved for that purpose. Why have they evolved?
The theory of natural selection holds that nothing evolves for a purpose…