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Free Will and Religion - Page 39

Forum Index > General Forum 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 All
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.
 
 L3gendary   Canada. March 11 2012 06:48. Posts 1201
Profile # 

On March 11 2012 06:44 Hertzy wrote:

Show nested quote +



True, you can write a computer program that gives a predetermined output in response to an input. However, you can't then expand that program to analyze it's own code and return the output it is not supposed to return, because any output is what the code tells the program to return.

The thought experiment I put forward relies quite heavily on the future being predetermined. I would argue that if there is some unpredictable phenomenon affecting human decision making, you can call that free will.


Sorry for the confusion but I didn't mean the computer program was the same machine as the one that could determine the future. Let's say there was a machine that could determine the future and then there's a completely different machine that only runs this piece of code I talked about. So it takes the output of the first machine and inputs it to the 2nd machine and reverses the number.
Watching Jaedong play purifies my eyes. -Coach Ju Hoon
Old Post

 
 Vei   United States. March 11 2012 06:49. Posts 2701
Profile # 

On March 11 2012 03:33 Hertzy wrote:
Here's a thought experiment; let's presume universe has no free will. Let's further presume a machine that can gather enough data to tell the future for about a minute ahead.

Put two cards, let's say an ace of spades and an ace of diamonds, face up on a table in front of a contrarian or a free will proponent, use the machine to foretell which they'll pick, tell them the result and then ask them to pick either card. Just how will this go down?

it is a paradox because you cannot have a machine process the reactions of something that has more moving parts than the machine has switches (0-1 binary switches)

so the situation you describe cannot exist for that reason, hence its paradoxical nature
Last edit: 2012-03-11 06:49:49
www.justin.tv/veisc2 ~ 720p + commentary
Old Post

 
 GGTeMpLaR   United States. March 11 2012 06:55. Posts 3833
Profile Blog # 

On March 11 2012 06:41 L3gendary wrote:

Show nested quote +



No but that's it you could not have. Let's say a ball went into a net. You could entertain the idea that it had not, that is it hypothetically missed. But if you examine it on a fundamental level you find it could not have done otherwise without violating laws of physics. In much the same way you had no actual choice of what to post when examined on a fundamental level. Hypotheticals only come into play when we ignore laws of physics and talk about wishful thinking.


I "actually" could not have, even though the hypothetical possibility still remains. A better example would be one that actually involves an action, such as choosing to throw the ball into the net or not choosing to throw the ball into the net. Our understanding of causation is not certain knowledge, it's probabilistic knowledge. In predicting before the moment in time where one decides whether or not to throw the ball into the net, the best we can say is "there is X probability they will throw it into the net and 1-X probability that they will not".

Once the act is done, it can be hypothetically considered how it could have been otherwise (due to the inherent probability of it occurring having been greater than 0 within our framework of understanding), yet we can also say that it actually could not have been otherwise. A choice is still being made, it just so happens that the choice made will be in accordance with what was determined.

This "fundamental level" you suggest we are capable of examining from is entirely hypothetical as well because we have no certain understanding of the actual causation of what led me to post rather than not post, it is at best a probabilistic understanding. Problem of induction in a nutshell.
Last edit: 2012-03-11 07:00:09
“Although our intellect always longs for clarity and certainty, our nature often finds uncertainty fascinating.” ~Karl Von Clausewitz~
Old Post

 
 BillClinton   March 11 2012 07:00. Posts 229
Profile # 
calm down, if you have good arguments you wont need to force others to acknowledge your points.

I think the main problem is:

Does a configuration of the aggregation of variables in the universe (conditions) which have a relation to the subject 'pre'determine its actions (change of conditions) or vice versa.

Thats why I think the 'chicken and egg' paradox fits well, what was first, the 'change of conditions' or the 'conditions' itselves which lead to a 'change of conditions'?
Last edit: 2012-03-11 07:20:52
Before you judge sth, keep in mind that the less you know sth about sth, the more that what you think or pretend to know about it, it says about yourself and your environment.
Old Post

 
 L3gendary   Canada. March 11 2012 07:09. Posts 1201
Profile # 

On March 11 2012 06:55 GGTeMpLaR wrote:

Show nested quote +



I "actually" could not have, even though the hypothetical possibility still remains. A better example would be one that actually involves an action, such as choosing to throw the ball into the net or not choosing to throw the ball into the net. Our understanding of causation is not certain knowledge, it's probabilistic knowledge. In predicting before the moment in time where one decides whether or not to throw the ball into the net, the best we can say is "there is X probability they will throw it into the net and 1-X probability that they will not".

Once the act is done, it can be hypothetically considered how it could have been otherwise (due to the inherent probability of it occurring having been greater than 0 within our framework of understanding), yet we can also say that it actually could not have been otherwise. A choice is still being made, it just so happens that the choice made will be in accordance with what was determined.

This "fundamental level" you suggest we are capable of examining from is entirely hypothetical as well because we have no certain understanding of the actual causation of what led me to post rather than not post, it is at best probabilistic. Problem of induction in a nutshell.


But the probability of it occurring otherwise is inherently 0 in the classical deterministic sense. The fundamental laws of classical physics do not describe "actions" but trajectories that obey conservation of momentum and energy. So every thing that exists within the universe follows a continuous path outlined by these laws. In more complex systems like robots or animals or people its not as simple as a ball going through the air but a result of electrical motion. To suggest other possibilities is to suggest that one or more particles took a different path than it should have according to laws of physics. This is why the probability of these hypotheticals is exactly 0 with this world view.

It is only non-zero in quantum mechanics but QM but doesn't allow for local hidden variables. So it could not depend on anything including someone's will, and in fact would mean that people are partially at the mercy of these "dice rolls".
Watching Jaedong play purifies my eyes. -Coach Ju Hoon
Old Post

 
 BillClinton   March 11 2012 07:26. Posts 229
Profile # 
Another important question is how does a human without 'free will' determine to suicide?

[There is a german metaphor called someone has chosen the 'Freitod' which means someone has taken his/her own life (free will to suicide).]
Last edit: 2012-03-11 07:33:32
Before you judge sth, keep in mind that the less you know sth about sth, the more that what you think or pretend to know about it, it says about yourself and your environment.
Old Post

 
 Akta   March 11 2012 07:37. Posts 447
Profile # 

On March 11 2012 07:26 BillClinton wrote:
Another important question is how does a human without 'free will' determine to suicide?

[There is a german metaphor called someone has chosen the 'Freitod' which means someone has taken his/her own life (free will to suicide).]
Don't see how suicide is different that other actions from a no free will point of view.
Old Post

 
 GGTeMpLaR   United States. March 11 2012 07:37. Posts 3833
Profile Blog # 

On March 11 2012 07:00 BillClinton wrote:
calm down, if you have good arguments you wont need to force others to acknowledge your points.

I think the main problem is:

Does a configuration of the aggregation of variables in the universe (conditions) which have a relation to the subject 'pre'determine its actions (change of conditions) or vice versa.

Thats why I think the 'chicken and egg' paradox fits well, what was first, the 'change of conditions' or the 'conditions' itselves which lead to a 'change of conditions'?


I think that point is actually a great way to discern between the two notions of deterministic causation in the universe.
Last edit: 2012-03-11 07:37:46
“Although our intellect always longs for clarity and certainty, our nature often finds uncertainty fascinating.” ~Karl Von Clausewitz~
Old Post

 
 Forester   United States. March 11 2012 07:47. Posts 109
Profile # 
I always find it interesting how athiests attribute so many godlike qualities to the universe, such as the laws of physics and the randomness OP talks about. Makes me wonder who really believes what sometimes...
The greatest pleasure in life is doing what people say you cannot do.
Old Post

 
 Akta   March 11 2012 07:52. Posts 447
Profile # 

On March 11 2012 07:47 Forester wrote:
I always find it interesting how athiests attribute so many godlike qualities to the universe, such as the laws of physics and the randomness OP talks about. Makes me wonder who really believes what sometimes...
Can you elaborate on what those godlike attributes are and how they are applied to the universe by atheists?


edit
To clarify: Since you find it interesting and it's somewhat related to free will we can discuss how opinions tend to form if you can be more specific in what you meant.
Last edit: 2012-03-11 07:59:31
Old Post

 
 GGTeMpLaR   United States. March 11 2012 08:04. Posts 3833
Profile Blog # 

On March 11 2012 07:09 L3gendary wrote:

Show nested quote +



But the probability of it occurring otherwise is inherently 0 in the classical deterministic sense. The fundamental laws of classical physics do not describe "actions" but trajectories that obey conservation of momentum and energy. So every thing that exists within the universe follows a continuous path outlined by these laws. In more complex systems like robots or animals or people its not as simple as a ball going through the air but a result of electrical motion. To suggest other possibilities is to suggest that one or more particles took a different path than it should have according to laws of physics. This is why the probability of these hypotheticals is exactly 0 with this world view.



That rests on the assumption that the motion of every single atom in our body will directly influence its meta-behavior and actions of the self as a whole such as leading to one throwing the ball instead of not throwing it. It's similar to the butterfly effect except, but it's merely a possibility that a small event in initial conditions can have major consequences, not a necessity.

As a hypothetical example, perhaps the flap of a butterflies wings could in fact lead to a tsunami across the world at a later time, but it is not a necessity that every single flap of every butterflies wings will cause a tsunami across the world. Likewise, just because every single particle acts according to the laws of physics within our body doesn't necessarily mean that the hypothetical probability of alternate events occurring in reality such as not throwing the ball would have necessarily have also been 0. Also, (perhaps this is related, perhaps not) keep in mind that our current understanding of physics is not absolute.
Last edit: 2012-03-11 08:06:53
“Although our intellect always longs for clarity and certainty, our nature often finds uncertainty fascinating.” ~Karl Von Clausewitz~
Old Post

 
 Kleander   United States. March 11 2012 08:14. Posts 328
Profile Blog # 

On March 05 2012 21:37 paralleluniverse wrote:
Sam Harris is releasing an ebook on Free Will tomorrow.

http://www.amazon.com/Free-Will-Sam-Harris/dp/1451683405
http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/the-illusion-of-free-will

To preempt that, I felt that I should write down my own thoughts on free will.

I simply cannot see how free will can fit into what we know about the universe. The universe is governed by the laws of physics, therefore there is no scope for free will to exist. Everything in the universe, and hence every thought and action made by a human is simply the motion of particles obeying certain laws. Therefore, free will does not exist because we cannot choose how the particles that constitute our body move, they move in accordance with the laws of physics. Random or deterministic, it doesn't matter, because we cannot exert influence nor make choices independent of the motion of particles that are dictated by these laws in either case.

As with everything in the universe, every thought and action made by a person is not a result of free will, it's a result of the laws of physics acting on particles.

Not even the intrinsic randomness of Quantum Mechanics saves the free will hypothesis, as this would imply that your thoughts and actions are caused by fundamentally unpredictable random processes. If so, then they are the result of a universal RNG, thus they would still not be free.

The only reason theologians and religious people latch on to the completely unscientific notion of free will is to "explain" why bad things happen. If God is good, then why did he let the genocide in Rwanda happen? Why does he not intervene in the the mass-murder being conducted by the Syrian government, as we speak? Why is there evil in the world. Because God gave us free will, allegedly. This is then neatly tied into the Original Sin myth, whereby Eve exerted free will and chose to eat from the Garden of Eden, and this frivolous reason somehow necessitated that Jesus die on the cross.

Religions abuse this nonexistent notion of free will in an attempt to explain away the gaping flaws of the God hypothesis and the existence of evil.



On March 05 2012 22:49 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:

Show nested quote +



That's an interesting topic and I'd like to hear elaboration on it.

I can see the argument that since our decisions arise from previous experiences, predisposed notions, and chemical reactions in the brain and body, you don't have the willpower or control you might think you do. But if that's the case, I wonder if you merely punish the host body of a destructive force, and label the entire entity as a criminal... and can he really ever control his desire to do wrong in society? He was just pre-programmed for failure? How does it work exactly?

Can someone clarify?




There's another reason to believe in free will.

If man is not allowed to make his own actions, and is governed by his DNA, the way he was raised, and the laws of physics, then there's nothing left up to "him" to decide. In that scenario, a "man" is no longer in control of his body, and is thus not responsible for his actions.

If free will doesn't exist then a murderer is not guilty of a crime because he didn't chose to commit it. He is guilty of having the DNA to be capable of murder and the nurtured instinct to murder. So why is he punished for conditions outside of his control?

If I am just a product of my environment, then why isn't my environment responsible for my actions? and on that same thought, why would my parents or society be responsible for their actions? Didn't they just do as they are programmed to do via DNA, their upbringing, and their limits within the laws of physics?

Why should I feel proud of my achievements if they were destined to me from the get go? or why should I feel ashamed of my failures? After all, it's not my fault they happened.

At some level you have to agree that we have access to the decisions we make, otherwise we're not responsible for them, and we should be able to do what we want, when we want it, without fear of repercussions.

Voltaire once wrote that, "If god didn't exist, it would be necessary to invent him." I feel the same argument should be applied to Free will as well.
Last edit: 2012-03-11 08:48:30
Ambition is a poor excuse for not having enough sense to be lazy. 지지 Guess who's learning Korean
Old Post

  FrodoAndTheSlobStix   United States. March 11 2012 08:19. Posts 158Profile # 
Why can't we all just get along
You eat meat? Then your evil. Simple as that.
Old Post

 
 L3gendary   Canada. March 11 2012 08:30. Posts 1201
Profile # 

On March 11 2012 08:04 GGTeMpLaR wrote:

Show nested quote +



That rests on the assumption that the motion of every single atom in our body will directly influence its meta-behavior and actions of the self as a whole such as leading to one throwing the ball instead of not throwing it. It's similar to the butterfly effect except, but it's merely a possibility that a small event in initial conditions can have major consequences, not a necessity.

As a hypothetical example, perhaps the flap of a butterflies wings could in fact lead to a tsunami across the world at a later time, but it is not a necessity that every single flap of every butterflies wings will cause a tsunami across the world. Likewise, just because every single particle acts according to the laws of physics within our body doesn't necessarily mean that the hypothetical probability of alternate events occurring in reality such as not throwing the ball would have necessarily have also been 0. Also, (perhaps this is related, perhaps not) keep in mind that our current understanding of physics is not absolute.


The butterfly effect (chaos theory) is deterministic. So a certain set of initial condition will lead to the same effect even a chaotic one, it cannot lead to multiple things. You can't speak about every butterfly's flapping their wings at any time. Each of those instances involve different conditions. The butterflies are in different positions, at different times, they flap their wings at different angles and elevation and at different strength and so on and so on. These are all different initial conditions.

I think you're confusing the difference between determinism and predictability. Just because we lack the ability to track every particle in the universe doesn't mean they dont follow these laws of motion (again strictly speaking about classical physics). That is more a limit on our instruments than our understanding.
Last edit: 2012-03-11 08:34:18
Watching Jaedong play purifies my eyes. -Coach Ju Hoon
Old Post

 
 SpiritoftheTunA   United States. March 11 2012 08:38. Posts 5840
Profile Blog # 
yeah i'm still on l3gendary's side, your definition of free will has no "free," ggtemplar. you seem to be referring to the perception of choice and nothing else
Last edit: 2012-03-11 08:45:39
:3 || “So shall it be in the end of the world: the angels shall come forth, and sever the wicked from among the righteous, and shall cast them into the furnace of fire: there shall be the weeping and the gnashing of teeth.” Matthew 13:49-50
Old Post

 
 emc   United States. March 11 2012 08:47. Posts 2909
Profile # 

On March 05 2012 21:58 Timmsh wrote:

Show nested quote +


Sorry dude but you missed the point,
I said i don't know the cause,
but i do know there is a cause!
Which is the most important thing in this discussion, because if you know there is a cause to your decisions,
you cannot believe in an 'external controller' you say it is.

You said, it's my decision to move, as if you are external of this universe and just control your body.
I only said that's not true, and the universe has influence on your decisions in such a way, you only THINK your in controll.


how is that any different from believing in a religion and thinking your not in control but god is?
take what i say with a grain of salt, make your own decisions and form your own opinions
Old Post

 
 SpiritoftheTunA   United States. March 11 2012 08:50. Posts 5840
Profile Blog # 

On March 11 2012 08:47 emc wrote:

Show nested quote +



how is that any different from believing in a religion and thinking your not in control but god is?

a lot of religions believe their gods have wills and disobeyable rules and such; the laws of physics operate in no such way.
:3 || “So shall it be in the end of the world: the angels shall come forth, and sever the wicked from among the righteous, and shall cast them into the furnace of fire: there shall be the weeping and the gnashing of teeth.” Matthew 13:49-50
Old Post

 
 Mente   United States. March 11 2012 09:22. Posts 287
Profile # 
I feel bad if these things have already been mentioned in this thread, I just read the topic and the first post and then posts on this last page but...

First note: if you haven't read the works between st augustine and spinoza I highly suggest checking them out as they both try to make valid points on whether free will exists or doesn't exist.

Second note: there's a great article in the Ny times that came out maybe 2 years ago (do we have free will: yes it's the only choice just do a google search for it) that explains some of the moral issues that people are confronted with and whether or not some decisions are made with free will or not.

Third note: Every cognitive science in the world, EXCLUDING physics (specifically quantum physics) has found some level of proof that proves that the universe is deterministic, everything happens for a reason which can in effect be predicted based on certain facts. Quantum physics on the other hand has a particular facet of it that specifies in the study of probability and events at the subatomic level. As such a good way to describe it would be: things are most likely to occur one way but... maybe they don't some times.

Finally, I tend to gravitate towards there being some level of free will, but it's kind of a mix. It just makes more sense that way from the things I've read and the opinions I've made as such.
Last edit: 2012-03-11 10:00:57
Solomon Grundy want pants too!
Old Post

 
 Nevermind86   Somalia. March 11 2012 09:30. Posts 410
Profile # 

On March 10 2012 14:16 Warillions wrote:
god is fake. free will is fake. we are all programmed variants of nature.



Your argumentation seems to me as good as: "God is the almighty creator, free will exists because god gave it to us, we are the top of the nature because we have souls and go to heaven".
Interviewer: Many people hate you and would like to see you dead. How does that make you feel? Trevor Goodchild: Those people should get to know me a little better. Then they'd know I don't indulge in feelings.
Old Post

 
 SpiritoftheTunA   United States. March 11 2012 09:35. Posts 5840
Profile Blog # 

On March 11 2012 09:22 Mente wrote:
Third note: Every cognitive science in the world, EXCLUDING physics (specifically quantum physics) attempt to prove that the universe is deterministic, everything happens for a reason which can in effect be predicted based on certain facts. Quantum physics on the other hand is the study of probability and as such attempts to explain that things are most likely to occur one way but... maybe they don't some times.


such bold statements about cognitive science and physics. quantum physics is not the study of probability, it's the study of the very small. probability waves are just one of QM's many tools to describe how very small things work.

and i'd be surprised if you could find me a cognitive scientist who claims the field is attempting to prove that the universe is deterministic.

like bro you calling THIS
+ Show Spoiler +
you calling THIS probability?
Last edit: 2012-03-11 09:49:26
:3 || “So shall it be in the end of the world: the angels shall come forth, and sever the wicked from among the righteous, and shall cast them into the furnace of fire: there shall be the weeping and the gnashing of teeth.” Matthew 13:49-50
Old Post

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