J
JuanFlorencio
Guest
Blase,An experience of possibilities does not mean that those possibilities are real. You may think that you can choose between X and Y, but when you finally choose Y, you can’t know if the possibility of choosing X was real.
I never said that the possibilities were real in the sense that you are implying. But I do say that a possibility is a real possibility, for example, when it involves no contradiction, or when the current state of our technological development justifies us to work on a determined project. Then we use to say that such project is really possible. It happens everyday that many of us have to deliberate between a number of alternatives, all of which are really possible but not equally convenient. Even in the case I choose to pursue X the real possibility of Y (in the sense I just have explained) is not discarded. Some other times we realize that we don’t have to choose between X and Y, because one does not exclude the other, and then we decide to pursue both. All those activities happen to be part of what we call freedom. It’s real, Blase.
But what about your notion of “simple”? Is it clearer now? It seems to me that you owe me another response, but I don’t remember which, do you?
Regards
JuanFlorencio