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Free Will

muhammad_isa

Well-Known Member
..So, what is *your* definition of the term 'exists'?
The same as yours, I would think..
..except that I believe that it is possible for things to exist that are either beyond our comprehension, or capacity to observe.

..notice in my argument on compatibility, I do not claim that free-will and a determined universe are ALWAYS compatible..
I just lay out the case for one possibility, based on an agent that MIGHT exist, that we cannot observe.

The business about contingency, is only one way to explain it .. you are effectively putting the cart before the horse.
..but that is irrelevant to you, as you do not believe it is possible to know the future, without it being responsible
for causing it.
 

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
The same as yours, I would think..
Clearly not. My definition requires that there be some way to observe a thing that exists, at least in theory.
..except that I believe that it is possible for things to exist that are either beyond our comprehension, or capacity to observe.
That's not a definition. it is an emotional appeal.

If it is impossible *even in theory* to observe something, its existence is no different than its non-existence.

So, let's ask if it is possible for something to exist that doesn't interact with *anything* else: so there is no way to detect it, no way to observe it, even through its effect on other things, no way in which it has any effect on *anything*.

Does it even make sense to say it exists? I would say not.
..notice in my argument on compatibility, I do not claim that free-will and a determined universe are ALWAYS compatible..
I just lay out the case for one possibility, based on an agent that MIGHT exist, that we cannot observe.
And, in that case, what does it even mean to say it exists? What distinguishes it from those things that do not exist?

The business about contingency, is only one way to explain it .. you are effectively putting the cart before the horse.
..but that is irrelevant to you, as you do not believe it is possible to know the future, without it being responsible
for causing it.
No, I am NOT claiming that knowledge determines the future or that the one that knows determines the future. I am saying that if knowledge is possible, then the future is determined. Both have a common logical origin, but neither causes the other.
 

muhammad_isa

Well-Known Member
And, in that case, what does it even mean to say it exists? What distinguishes it from those things that do not exist?
This is a philosophical argument about existence, rather than free-will.
I say, for sake of argument, that an agent [God] MIGHT exist.
..and many people seem to feel the same way. :)

No, I am NOT claiming that knowledge determines the future or that the one that knows determines the future. I am saying that if knowledge is possible, then the future is determined. Both have a common logical origin, but neither causes the other.
Sorry, but you keep changing your claim..
In post #346, you say..

"But the fact that there is only one means that there isn't a possibility of a different one."
...
"No, I am claiming that *if* it can be known, then it is fixed and thereby not subject to choice."
...
"Because if it is *known*, then it cannot be other than what it is. And that impossibility means there is no free choice.
..
"We are 'experiencing time and making choices' but those choices are already determined and so *cannot* be free."


..so have you changed your position, or not?
..because I strongly disagree with the above, for the reasons I've already stated.
It is a fallacy that there is "no possibility of a different one".
It has to be something in the first place, for it to change .. modal fallacy
. :)
 

muhammad_isa

Well-Known Member
No, But I am tired of going in unproductive circles, whether square or round.
OK.
I understand you .. but you don't seem to understand me.

I understand why you would think that a "fixed future" i.e. a determined one, implies that we have no choice.
It is a classic paradox.

Our world views differ, so we have different solutions .. bye then. :)
 
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