Free Will and Religion - Page 24
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Yes, this is a thread on TL that involves religion, but I hate to think that our policy should be to blindly close every such thread. Sam Harris is a writer whose books are both insightful and have sparked many good discussions in the past and as long as the thread doesn't derail I'd like to leave it open. This should be the basic premise for every such thread, no matter how high the odds of it derailing. In that light, these posts that just predict the downfall of this thread (whether it be pre-determined or not) are 1) Not contributing to the discussion 2) Backseat moderating 3) Annoying 4) Actually contributing towards derailing it. I'll keep 2 daying people for this. | ||
xM(Z
Romania5277 Posts
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Imbaman
Singapore15 Posts
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Nyxisto
Germany6287 Posts
I cannot understand how someone can state that god does not obey logic, physics or any other way of thinking humans are capable of, and then start a side long deductive argument. I think that "kind of god" is principally fine, as by its definition you can't argue against it because as people get not tired of mentioning, it stays kind of above any model we are using, and as mentioned before laws of physics and logic are made up by humans and just descriptive. But if you assume that you can put the whole discussion into a box and put it on your bookshelf, because then theres no point of arguing about it at all, because you have to assume that no kind of language or method would be able to describe it. So leaving the whole god thing beside, i think there's really little chance that free will exists in a way that it would justify the use of the words. Often times arguments where brought up that go like "I will take the bus tomorrow, and thats under my control, so i have a free will." But you could just programm a robot to make this statement. Schopenhauer said "You can do what you want, but you cannot want what you want" And i think that fits to that scenario. The fact that you feel like you are controlling what your doing is not sufficient. | ||
paralleluniverse
4065 Posts
On March 06 2012 00:53 Uncultured wrote: Now you're just going in circles. That very same article proposes a theory for compatabilism to be true, from Stephen Hawking himself. And that's exactly what this all is, theory. You keep citing physics as if this is all pinned down as fact, but even Hawking and Schrodinger both assert that they could be wrong about their beliefs of free will. You have cherry picked that single idea out of a plethora of possibilities and dote on only it, as fact. You keep trying to make it out like I'm arguing for Free Will, when I'm not. I'm arguing that free will is a possibility, along with determinism, along with both of them working together. In that very article it quotes Hawking saying that "free will is just an illusion". It then goes on to talk about compatibilism. But as I've already stated, compatibilism is semantics, it redefines free will as a the ability to act on personal motivation regardless of what prior causes had led to them. By definition, I'm also a compatibilist, as is probably nearly everyone. But this is obviously not the definition of free will which I was arguing against in the OP, and the 10 pages after. Free will is the ability to choose what you do independent of the state of the world. It's not conjectured that this free will I've talked about, instead of the compatibilist's definition, is inconsistent with our understanding of the universe, it's simply true in the sense that if free will exists, everything we know about the universe would be wrong. It would imply that the human brain can bend the laws of physics and can rearrange the of motions of particles according to whatever we will. Therefore, such a discovery would fundamentally contradict and rewrite all we know about physics. It is not a stretch to say that the free will I talked about in the OP is unscientific, unproven, and as false as fairies and gods. You're argument has 2 points: Firstly, you claim the universe is random, so free will is possible. But you've still not demonstrated how QM, can lead to free will, because you haven't made a single argument to refute my point that even in an nondeterministic and random universe governed by QM, and the laws of physics as we know it, free will is still not possible. Your actions would be determined by a uncontrolled RNG in such a universe. Secondly, you say that our current understanding of the universe isn't sufficient for me to so confidently claim that free will does not exist. Our science also isn't sufficiently advanced to rule out fairies. That's why my argument is that free will almost certainly does not exist because it is inconsistent with what we know about the universe, the same argument that is used to rule out the existence of fairies. Therefore, the only conclusion can be free will exists and everything we know about the universe is wrong, or free will doesn't exist. The option that free will exists, but everything we know about the universe is still correct is indefensible, and you've made no attempt to defend it. | ||
Nudelfisk
Sweden104 Posts
that being said, imo it would be a fatal mistake to use the "lack of free will" as an excuse for everything you do; you have to act "as if" you had free will in order to take responsibility for your actions and improve upon them, if you understand what i mean by this. | ||
sigma_x
Australia285 Posts
On March 06 2012 18:11 somatic wrote: As with most people (most religious people included) your misunderstanding of the the bible's message is causing your hatred towards it/reproach upon it. I have recently been studying with a group of bible student's (which exact denomination i will try to keep unmentioned because i fear my own lack of understanding on the matter may cause reproach upon their organisation) and will try enlighten you on the situation. Not so much on the free will part of the discussion, i have not read any of the comments yet but will assume my view has been mentioned already. Something along the lines of - if a thought pops into my head it is my choice whether i act on it or not. That choice is me exercising free will. "If God is good, then why did he let the genocide in Rwanda happen?" As you mentioned it is tied in to the Adam and Eve scenario. What essentially happened there was Adam and Eve choosing not to follow God's law's and hence live by their own rules. The consequence is that God is now allowing humans and Satan to have their chance to prove they can rule themselves it is not until when all is lost that He will step in and save the righteous. So i guess technically you are right he is ALLOWING it to happen but it is Satan's influence and humans that are CAUSING it to happen. He gives all the opportunity to learn about Him and try to correct their ways and as reward eternal life. Unlike many religious organisations that will say it was God's will that those things happen the truth is that he is merely allowing it to happen so His purpose for further down the track can be fulfilled.If i were a better student/more experienced teacher I could site scriptures pertaining to these facts, i guess i can try dig them up for anyone if they are truly interested. "Why does he not intervene in the the mass-murder being conducted by the Syrian government, as we speak? " If he were to intervene any time something bad happened he would be prolonging the existence of Satan's reign over the Earth, by waiting he is settling the issue at the fastest pace possible once and for all, while giving every body the chance to redeem themselves by giving His word, the bible. Most of the gaping flaws you mention are a product of the teachings of the popular churches whose teachings have been combined with pagan beliefs (beginning during the reign of the Roman emperor Constantine.) and NOT from what the bible actually teaches. From what I have seen over my three or so years studying the bible, the logic is flawless. Much more so than any other human construct I have witnessed in my 27yrs on the Earth (examples such as national/international policies, movies, video game balance etc). I can guarantee many of your conceptions of what the bible actually teaches will be incorrect, as mine were before I began to study. Some examples are the existence of a "Hell", the holy trinity, immortality of the soul and God ruling the world at the moment rather than Satan as i already mentioned. If it adds anything to my credibility, not that it should in my own opinion, i have a degree in Engineering. Hopefully this will mitigate any derogatory comments about me being uneducated and having blind faith. On that note i do NOT have 100% faith in the bible, i have not decided to be baptised yet and am far from knowing enough to convince my self that it is correct. All i can say is that it deserves alot more credit than what is commonly given to it. ***edit*** After reading some of the comments and contemplating the topic a little more it has some interesting implications towards religion, in that if you are willing to accept that we do not have free will, or at least do not understand it, then you may be willing to concede that if a spirit being that was greater than us was to exist it could have influence over our behaviour, or, "will". The answers to the response you give have been pretty well established since 1955 (see J.L Mackie's, Evil and Omnipotence). First, for us, it makes sense to draw a difference between a positive act against a failure to act. For example, when a man is drowning off the coast, many people would say there is a difference between failing to act and allowing that man to die, and physically holding that man's head under the water. It makes sense in this circumstance to draw distinctions between the two. God, however, does not have this luxury. He is all powerful. To god therefore, it makes no sense to draw that sort of distinction. That it is Satan's influence, or humans or whatever is irrelevant. Allowing Satan to do something, and God doing it himself is really no difference at all. Second, it makes no sense to say that God should be concerned that the consequence of his actions prevent him from acting. This is a pointless argument. Humans, and other mortal beings who are not all powerful, have this problem. God, being omnipotent, doesn't need to allow anything to happen so that "His purpose" can be fulfilled. He can just make it happen. Which brings us to this thread. As far as the logical problem of evil is concerned, the only tenable response is a free will defence. In fact, most Christian apologists not only agree but think the matter has already been settled by reason of Platinga's free will defence. For my part, I am content defending J. L Mackie's logical problem of evil simply by asserting the truth of compatibilism. | ||
paralleluniverse
4065 Posts
On March 06 2012 00:59 GGTeMpLaR wrote: Determinism rejecting free will is semantics in the same exact way and expects an unrealistic definition of free will, hence why it doesn't exist. Not necessarily though because if you're a deterministic individual who doesn't believe in free will you're not a compatibilist, the definition of compatibilism is that the universe is deterministic but we still have free will. Scientific holism is the assumption that all science is capable of being unified, eventually we will be able to explain all phenomena in chemistry through pure physics in how particles interact, then biology, and continue to build up until we will eventually be able to explain everything through physics up to the point where human behavior can be mapped out and predicted. It relates extremely well to your argument since it's based on the fact that human behavior can be explained by particle interactions. If they can't be, then your understanding of the laws of the universe which are based on scientific holism won't fit so well anymore (which is more of an assumption than an understanding anyways). Even if science is holistic (which again, we don't know whether it is or not but it sure as hell isn't right now), it doesn't necessarily follow that the laws of the universe force one to reject free will. The definition of free will I used in the OP is not arbitrary. It's the one which is necessary for religionists to explain away the cause of evil in the world, since that is one of the main "applications" of the free will doctrine, and since it was the subject of the post. There is no doubt that biology is applied chemistry, that chemistry is applied, physics, and that in principle, everything about biology and the human brain can be explained by physics. But there is a difference between principle and practice. In principle, we can understand macroeconomics by aggregating the individual choices of individual agents using microeconomics, but such a feat is essentially impossible in practice given the trillions of variables, possibilities and complexities, and the same is true for science. Just as it is easier to understand aggregate demand and supply curves in macroeconomics than it is to combine the complexities and interactions of individual supply and demand curves for every agent in the economy, it is easier to study genetics as the inheritance of DNA than it as the totality of the motion of particles in a biological cell. To claim that biology cannot be fundamentally explain by physics in principle (though not in practice), is to assert that the laws of physics do not apply to biology. This would be absurd. | ||
paralleluniverse
4065 Posts
On March 06 2012 00:57 hypercube wrote: So the emotionally loaded language and the moral condemnation is just the laws of nature playing themselves out in one part of reality (you) affecting another (the mental state of your readers). I'd still hold that this kind of behaviour is inconsistent with your proffessed beliefs about reality but it would be unfair of me to criticise you for something that you have no controll over. I could, hoping that this criticism, however unjustified, would cause the behaviour to change, but I have a suspicion it wouldn't. If we extend this argument to it's logical extreme: why should I go to work tomorrow or do anything at all, if everything is predetermined? The nonexistence of free will doesn't change the fact that I can't afford to feed myself without working. If you want a more philosophical answer, I'm a compatiblist, i.e. I believe one does not have free will, but has weak free will, defined as the ability to do according to ones motivations (even if these motivations are not free). My motivations are to convince you I'm right, and obtain sustenance. | ||
Aunvilgod
2653 Posts
Of course this changes absolutely nothing about our life. | ||
sluggaslamoo
Australia4494 Posts
On March 06 2012 19:58 Imbaman wrote: There is no reason to believe that our brains do not use the laws of physics to operate.. Neuroscience has shown that emotions and actions can be induced by electrical signals artificially induced. Chemicals in the form of hormones affect our decisions everyday, and chemicals can be used to bring us out of consciousness among other things. Studies have also shown that when when certain parts of the brains are separated from the rest of the brain strange things happen. These people have been shown to be aware of what they are doing, but have no control over what they are doing. People who have their left brains separated from their right brains have been shown to be unable to say what they are looking at with their right eyes, because the right side of the brain control speech, but the information from the right eye only goes into the left brain. They are able to say it by writing it down with their right hands, and using their left eye to see what their right hand wrote. These examples show how awareness/consciousness/free will is all an illusion derived from our highly complex brain being able to take into account immense amounts of input including things from far in the past in order to come to a decision in a situation. I think this is the best post I've read so far in the thread. Examples of Right and Left brain separation blows my mind, its like having another soul within your body. | ||
paralleluniverse
4065 Posts
On March 06 2012 08:14 HailPlays wrote: The laws of physics do no such thing. They are just descriptions of causal relationships that repeat themselves. At no point can science claim that these laws actually govern anything. They're just the best explanations we can come up with right now. You have made the error of equating scientific theories with objective, certain truth, when they have no stronger a claim to that than a priest. Feel free to take your philosophical escapade to the next level by reading up on Hume's problem of induction. If you would rather I explain the problem to you, do let me know. Not to mention the whole slew of sceptical arguments of which those who use science in this way seem blissfully oblivious. The main point I made about the nonexistence of free will is that it is in contradiction with what we currently know about the universe. Even if our laws are wrong, it doesn't change the fact the universe is governed by some laws. The question is not whether the universe is governed by the laws we understand, but whether it's governed by any laws at all. If they are, then free will is not possible, because it would imply the human brain can make choices independent of what those laws dictate should happen. If you then invent some wonky explanation about there being a higher order truth in the universe, call this L1, of which our laws, call them L2, are only an approximation, and that the laws L1, allow for the human brain to bend L2 in a way that lets humans exhibit free will, then, firstly, my assertion that free will is inconsistent with our current understanding of the universe still holds, and secondly, while you're making things up, you might as well claim that fairies exist. Another possibility is that the universe isn't governed by laws at all, so you do have free will as it wouldn't violate the nonexistent laws of physics. This seems a bit harder to sell. | ||
FalahNorei
Germany56 Posts
On March 06 2012 21:09 paralleluniverse wrote: If we extend this argument to it's logical extreme: why should I go to work tomorrow or do anything at all, if everything is predetermined? The nonexistence of free will doesn't change the fact that I can't afford to feed myself without working. If you want a more philosophical answer, I'm a compatiblist, i.e. I believe one does not have free will, but has weak free will, defined as the ability to do according to ones motivations (even if these motivations are not free). My motivations are to convince you I'm right, and obtain sustenance. you're right, it wouldn't really matter if you go to work tomorrow or not - but your body and mind are "programmed" to take care that you can continue existing (therefor, not starving), the logical consequence is to go to work so you can afford food. its the one thing to say "free will doesn't exist, it doesn't matter what I do!" and the other to say "it doesn't matter what I do, therefor I could/should commit suicide (in your argument, in the form of stopping to work and starving to death)" the ladder wouldn't really matter either, it doesn't change anything in the overall situation if you go to work or not. BUT, it changes something for your very own situation. you aren't programmed/made/created whatever to like dying or love death, therefor you try to fight it. humans are like a stone rolling down a mountain (just a tad bit more complex), you cannot stop what you do, and therefor you don't WANT to stop it either. if the rolling stone could think, it'd want to continue rolling forever, since it'd be afraid of ever stopping. if a human stops rolling down, we call that dying, and we want to have the laws of physic and the outtern surroundings keep us rolling for as long as possible, simply because physics forces us to. I'm not very good with words at all, and english isn't my first language, so sorry if something is a bit confusing or worded too harshly, have no ill intentions (nor do I want to push anyone into suicide or something stupid like that) just my two cents | ||
paralleluniverse
4065 Posts
On March 06 2012 08:54 Njbrownie wrote: If what you say is true, then people would not have any control over a single thing they did in life ever. Except people do have choices in life. They are faced with millions of choices and these choices are subject to reason. Reasonably, your "decision to move" is your will, you have it right at the front of this chain of command. How do you describe a contradictory post and all together moot your own point? The mind is a complex feature that noone knows enough about to adiquitely describe a scenerio such as ones life being pre-determined. People have been debating this forever and both sides agree that there are some form of indeterminism is true! According to logic, then if experts in the area all agree that indeterminism exists how in the hell can you turn around and say it doesn't? Whereas, determinism has little to no factual backing and tons of theories floating with open ends left unproven. But do you really have a choice to move or not? If you did have a choice, that would imply that you can, independent of the world, choose either to receive electrical impulse in the synapses of your brain that constitutes the intention to move or to receive a different electrical impulse which constitutes the intention to not move. Therefore, you imply that the motion of the elementary particles that makes up your thought are chosen by a human brain, as opposed to being dictated by the laws of physics acting on this system of particles from a prior state. This is absurd and contradicts our current understanding of physics. Sam Harris has another point of view on the issue of humans feeling like they make choices, in the article I linked in the OP. Perhaps his exposition is more relatable: In the early morning of July 23, 2007, Steven Hayes and Joshua Komisarjevsky, two career criminals, arrived at the home of Dr. William and Jennifer Petit in Cheshire, a quiet town in central Connecticut. They found Dr. Petit asleep on a sofa in the sunroom. According to his taped confession, Komisarjevsky stood over the sleeping man for some minutes, hesitating, before striking him in the head with a baseball bat. He claimed that his victim’s screams then triggered something within him, and he bludgeoned Petit with all his strength until he fell silent. The two then bound Petit’s hands and feet and went upstairs to search the rest of the house. They discovered Jennifer Petit and her daughters—Hayley, 17, and Michaela, 11—still asleep. They woke all three and immediately tied them to their beds. At 7:00 a.m., Hayes went to a gas station and bought four gallons of gasoline. At 9:30, he drove Jennifer Petit to her bank to withdraw $15,000 in cash. The conversation between Jennifer and the bank teller suggests that she was unaware of her husband’s injuries and believed that her captors would release her family unharmed. While Hayes and the girls’ mother were away, Komisarjevsky amused himself by taking naked photos of Michaela with his cell phone and masturbating on her. When Hayes returned with Jennifer, the two men divided up the money and briefly considered what they should do. They decided that Hayes should take Jennifer into the living room and rape her—which he did. He then strangled her, to the apparent surprise of his partner. At this point, the two men noticed that William Petit had slipped his bonds and escaped. They began to panic. They quickly doused the house with gasoline and set it on fire. When asked by the police why he hadn’t untied the two girls from their beds before lighting the blaze, Komisarjevsky said, “It just didn’t cross my mind.” The girls died of smoke inhalation. William Petit was the only survivor of the attack. Upon hearing about crimes of this kind, most of us naturally feel that men like Hayes and Komisarjevsky should be held morally responsible for their actions. Had we been close to the Petit family, many of us would feel entirely justified in killing these monsters with our own hands. Do we care that Hayes has since shown signs of remorse and has attempted suicide? Not really. What about the fact that Komisarjevsky was repeatedly raped as a child? According to his journals, for as long as he can remember, he has known that he was “different” from other people, psychologically damaged, and capable of great coldness. He also claims to have been stunned by his own behavior in the Petit home: He was a career burglar, not a murderer, and he had not consciously intended to kill anyone. Such details might begin to give us pause. Whether criminals like Hayes and Komisarjevsky can be trusted to honestly report their feelings and intentions is not the point: Whatever their conscious motives, these men cannot know why they are as they are. Nor can we account for why we are not like them. As sickening as I find their behavior, I have to admit that if I were to trade places with one of these men, atom for atom, I would be him: There is no extra part of me that could decide to see the world differently or to resist the impulse to victimize other people. Even if you believe that every human being harbors an immortal soul, the problem of responsibility remains: I cannot take credit for the fact that I do not have the soul of a psychopath. If I had truly been in Komisarjevsky’s shoes on July 23, 2007—that is, if I had his genes and life experience and an identical brain (or soul) in an identical state—I would have acted exactly as he did. There is simply no intellectually respectable position from which to deny this. The role of luck, therefore, appears decisive. | ||
BillClinton
232 Posts
A law is always system-bound (the consequence[s] of the law is/are related to a definite space), if we talk about laws of nature it is always an approximation and therefore a reduction of reality. 'Even' the laws of math are 'only' provable until the basic axioms within the system 'math'. If you say we obey to the laws of nature you imply the existence of an ultimate law (respectively god). Or you have to accept that the numbers we get from our artificial tools are probabilitistic abstractions [ex ante] and our conclusions thereof are only true as long as a more comprising theory is developing. | ||
paralleluniverse
4065 Posts
On March 06 2012 21:53 BillClinton wrote: What is a law of nature? A law is always system-bound (the consequence[s] of the law is/are related to a definite space), if we talk about laws of nature it is always an approximation and therefore a reduction of reality. 'Even' the laws of math are 'only' provable until the basic axioms within the system 'math'. If you say we obey to the laws of nature you imply the existence of an ultimate law (respectively god). Or you have to accept that the numbers we get from our artificial tools are probabilitistic abstractions [ex ante] and our conclusions thereof are only true as long as a more comprising theory is developing. What matters is not whether our laws are correct, but that there are laws underlying the mechanics of the universe. We didn't have more or less free will as we progressed from cavemen, to the time of Aristotle, to Newton, to Einstein. http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/viewmessage.php?topic_id=317894¤tpage=24#471 | ||
Oshuy
Netherlands529 Posts
What is debunked is that even if quantum fluctuations are fundamentally stochastic, i.e., completely random and unpredictable, it still does not imply that free will exists. I do not see why anyone would try to demonstrate that free will exists, that in itself would be absurd. The use of the quantum fluctuations is to point out that based on the same initial state, alternatives to the final outcome exist. A single experiment that is not determined is enough to leave room for choice. That gap is all that is required to allow for any decision making process we can imagine, including free will. The main point here being that we have no scientific way to collect enough data to prove/disprove it. (would appear as a bias in the randomness of quantum events linked to specific decisions, which we cannot measure yet) I agree it is absurd, I agree it is a bypass of the laws of the universe by something undefined which would have that "will". Point is, there is no scientific way to rule it out other than Ockham's razor. | ||
FalahNorei
Germany56 Posts
On March 06 2012 21:49 paralleluniverse wrote: But do you really have a choice to move or not? If you did have a choice, that would imply that you can, independent of the world, choose either to receive electrical impulse in the synapses of your brain that constitutes the intention to move or to receive a different electrical impulse which constitutes the intention to not move. Therefore, you imply that the motion of the elementary particles that makes up your thought are chosen by a human brain, as opposed to being dictated by the laws of physics acting on this system of particles from a prior state. This is absurd and contradicts our current understanding of physics. Sam Harris has another point of view on the issue of humans feeling like they make choices, in the article I linked in the OP. Perhaps his exposition is more relatable: also, if there's something like determinism, we can never predict the future - simply thanks to heisenberg and his uncertainity principle, saying that we can never messure two states of a particle infinitly exact. for example spin and position. therefor, we don't know where a particle will more, since we'll never be able to messure it, its as close to real chance as it'll ever get. and thats not something because our ways and instruments are flawed, its an actual physical law. therefor, probably indeterminism is right, but that by far doesn't mean that our brain has control over single particles and then is even able to force them to act against their nature. let alone the energy that'd be needed to manage that would be incredibly high, I don't really wanna know how much we'd have to eat in order to manage that. | ||
paralleluniverse
4065 Posts
On March 06 2012 12:25 kidcrash wrote: The problem with the bolded statement is that it's taking an all or none stance, when in fact there is much grey area to cover. Let's take a look at the probabilty within the randomness of quantum mechanics. Let's make a simplistic example to make it as clear is possible. Let's say that within 3 events or "actions", 2 of them are within the realm of free will, while the 3rd falls into the random nature of quantum mechanics. The key here is that the 3 actions can be independent of each other. As much as people would like to beleive that every single action is interconnected with each other, they don't have to be. I've never heard of such an idea in mainstream physics. Did you just make that up? Are you suggesting that somehow, it's possible for a fundamentally random event to be 1/3 random, and 2/3 chosen by a human mind. As I typed that out, I have no idea what the previous sentence even means. I don't suppose any sense can me made of your idea. | ||
somatic
Australia34 Posts
On March 06 2012 20:24 sigma_x wrote: The answers to the response you give have been pretty well established since 1955 (see J.L Mackie's, Evil and Omnipotence). First, for us, it makes sense to draw a difference between a positive act against a failure to act. For example, when a man is drowning off the coast, many people would say there is a difference between failing to act and allowing that man to die, and physically holding that man's head under the water. It makes sense in this circumstance to draw distinctions between the two. God, however, does not have this luxury. He is all powerful. To god therefore, it makes no sense to draw that sort of distinction. That it is Satan's influence, or humans or whatever is irrelevant. Allowing Satan to do something, and God doing it himself is really no difference at all. Second, it makes no sense to say that God should be concerned that the consequence of his actions prevent him from acting. This is a pointless argument. Humans, and other mortal beings who are not all powerful, have this problem. God, being omnipotent, doesn't need to allow anything to happen so that "His purpose" can be fulfilled. He can just make it happen. Which brings us to this thread. As far as the logical problem of evil is concerned, the only tenable response is a free will defence. In fact, most Christian apologists not only agree but think the matter has already been settled by reason of Platinga's free will defence. For my part, I am content defending J. L Mackie's logical problem of evil simply by asserting the truth of compatibilism. "Second, it makes no sense to say that God should be concerned that the consequence of his actions prevent him from acting. This is a pointless argument. Humans, and other mortal beings who are not all powerful, have this problem. God, being omnipotent, doesn't need to allow anything to happen so that "His purpose" can be fulfilled. He can just make it happen." I don't think God is concerned with the consequence of His actions. He knows that in the long run, those who believe in His word and act appropriately will be saved and thus His name will remain righteous and all righteous people will be saved. If he were to have intervened at the garden of Eden then he would have shown himself untrustworthy as he is taking away their ability to use free will and hence going against His word. So there is a need to allow things to happen. As humans we are not capable of knowing what it is like to be omnipotent and omniscient. This is how i think of it: Maybe God has the ability to peer into things and know the outcome but he may not choose to do so at all times. I would be interested to hear what implications that has for you. As for me I'm not quite sure :S but it does seem to make these sets of events make sense. Also someone mentioned a scripture that "God MADE Pharaohs heart obstinate" and thus violating an individuals free will. The translation i have says "Jehovah LET Pharoahs heart become obstinate". Thus not violating his free will. Jehovah's patience in this scenario is truly a thing of beauty and although it may seem difficult now, if we believe His word is true then we believe He has perfect justice then we can believe the reward will be well worth the effort now. | ||
paralleluniverse
4065 Posts
On March 06 2012 21:59 Oshuy wrote: I do not see why anyone would try to demonstrate that free will exists, that in itself would be absurd. The use of the quantum fluctuations is to point out that based on the same initial state, alternatives to the final outcome exist. A single experiment that is not determined is enough to leave room for choice. That gap is all that is required to allow for any decision making process we can imagine, including free will. The main point here being that we have no scientific way to collect enough data to prove/disprove it. (would appear as a bias in the randomness of quantum events linked to specific decisions, which we cannot measure yet) I agree it is absurd, I agree it is a bypass of the laws of the universe by something undefined which would have that "will". Point is, there is no scientific way to rule it out other than Ockham's razor. There is no gap. The gap is already filled by fundamental randomness. If humans can fill that gap with their will, then it is no longer fundamentally random, contradicting quantum mechanics, which brings be back to the point in the OP: the existence of free will is inconsistent with what we currently know about the universe. It's pretty much a fact that the universe is random. Quantum mechanics says so, and quantum mechanics is the most accurately verified theory in scientific history. The universe is random, but that doesn't imply free will exists. | ||
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