Oh, so you jumped on her and had sex right there? Or did you decide to let her walk away? |
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I'm going to share something that's been on my mind lately, and I'm sure that this thought has crossed others minds as well. |
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Oh, so you jumped on her and had sex right there? Or did you decide to let her walk away? |
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Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-01-2013 at 07:39 PM.
Human conciousness is composed of two parts. The identity of the preceiver is a compossition of the two. The two parts are the impulses and instincts of the human as an animal, and the other is composed of that etheral stuff we may call a spirit or soul or self-awareness. It is hardly possable to experience your identity completely from the soul side, with out the experience being highly colored by the natural aspects of the body. |
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Different words to say the same thing. Impulses and instincts are from the unconscious or animal part. And self-awareness is from the conscious mind. |
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Very nice! |
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Yeah, I thought it was pretty fascinating stuff. |
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People seem stuck on two possibilities, either free-will which appears intuitively correct but illogical when given proper examination, or determinism which often depresses people into something nihilistic. |
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Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
I'm sure you've experienced certain emotions that are just too strong to suppress, like when you're very happy or sad and you can't just do anything about it. You feel that way. With controlling actions do you mean bodily actions or your thought process? |
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Last edited by Athylus; 06-02-2013 at 01:36 PM.
Sounds like recapitulation theory. I don't think it's aged too well since Sagan (or Hegel). At the least, embryonic ontogeny is a lot more nuanced than these terms of 'passing through phylogenetic history'. What is interesting to me is what is called atavism. This is the phenomenon of people being born with tails, or more commonly, extra nipples, and such. What this comes from is the fact that ancient genes that were expressed in our evolutionary ancestor's phenotypes were not erased, more like 'deactivated' so that they are not expressed in modern organisms unless a genetic 'mistake' happens and these long-dormant genes are expressed. |
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^ I'm not sure what you're trying to say. Maybe it has been discredited in biological circles, but then I'm not making any specific biological claims. I'm just using the parallels between evolution and human development as an illustration. Do you disagree with any particular part of what I said? I don't see how anybody could argue against it as I presented it. We absolutely do go through the stages I mentioned, in the same order as our evolutionary ancestors did. And the development of a human mind loosely parallels the development of the mind through evolution up to our species. |
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Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-07-2013 at 04:56 AM.
There's an older version of recapitulation theory that I thought you were evoking, that the embryo goes through these stages reflecting its evolutionary past physically before it resembles the species that it is supposed to be. |
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Last edited by IndieAnthias; 06-07-2013 at 01:40 PM.
A good while back, I stumbled upon a Sam Harris talk on Youtube that covers this topic very well. He's of the opinion that free will doesn't exist and he puts forward some very simple, well reasoned (and I would say, convincing) arguments to back up that opinion. The video's quite long, but for anyone interested in the subject, I would recommend watching it: |
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Nope I do not think it exists. The choices we make are determined by our previous experiences and genetics, environment, diet etc. |
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Ok - Sleeper, I don't have time to watch that video right now but I will when I can. But I would seriously like an answer from some of you guys - let me post this so nobody can miss it: |
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Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-08-2013 at 08:05 AM.
This I believe is where a lot of the breakdown in communication occurs with the free will debate. How we define free will is ultimately going to determine whether or not we believe it exists. And it looks like we're just putting forward conclusive opinions without providing any detail on our own definitions. |
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Very well said! And I agree for the most part - though personally I don't subscribe to the idea of favorites - at least not in the simplistic way most people mean. If somebody asks me what's my favorite color I'll respond with "for what?". When I was a child and thought as a child I used to just say Blue, but now I have a much more subtle nuanced understanding of color (being an artist tends to do that) and I know blue is a whole family of colors. But I also don't favor blue for all things in all contexts, and I understand that the concept of favorites is pretty dumb. |
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Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-08-2013 at 06:13 PM.
I can't believe I'm saying this but I recommend you check out that Sam Harris talk when you get the chance (I'm not usually much a fan of him, but mainly for stylistic reasons.) I listened to it last night and I think he put a good argument forth. One thing he said in particular is an exact thought that I've had before, and I think it carries a lot of weight when you extrapolate out the consequences. (Not verbatim here, lots of my own words). Imagine the following thought experiment. |
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Last edited by IndieAnthias; 06-09-2013 at 12:00 AM.
Thank you for putting together so many words! It's good to read something from you here that doesn't sound like a tweet! |
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Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-09-2013 at 12:30 AM.
It's true that humans have more sophisticated minds than other animals, but I don't see in that any implication that this grants us free will. I'm not trying to make the argument here that humans are creatures of instinct and so have no ability to rationally weigh up their choices. It's obvious that humans have a far better capacity for complex thought than other animals. But although we may have a greater sense of self-awareness, we can't deny the fact that our minds are entirely subject to their physical makeup and the external forces they constantly interact with. The proteins in our diets, the temperature of our surroundings, the humidity of the air we breathe can all have an effect on our mood to the point of forcing us into a deep and severe depression. These things impact on the chemical structure of our brains, influencing our thoughts, which in turn influence our decisions. It's a chain of cause and effect. And with so many prior causes determining how we act, where does the freedom of will come from? |
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Exactly!! This seems to be why everybody is saying there's no such thing - because we can't make choices somehow in absolute isolation. But there's no such thing as absolute isolation from external or internal influences - what the heck does that even mean? How would you achieve that - have your brain removed and put in a vat? Hell, the temperature and saline content of the water would still influence your decisions! So if that's your definition of free will, then no, it obviously can't exist. By that very definition it's an impossibility. |
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Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-09-2013 at 01:49 AM.
Well, as far as I know, that's the definition that most people go with. And you're right, it does make it impossible. But it just seems like the most appropriate definition for the term. I don't think anyone seriously doubts that humans have a will. It's the inclusion of the word "free" that complicates things. If we all disagree on the fundamental definition of the thing we're discussing, then the rest of the debate it just going to be people talking past each other. People on the forum have pointed this out before and they're right. It tends to render the discussion pointless. |
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cbf reading all responses, sorry if just repeating, but you're right Dark, not being able to choose some things doesn't automatically prove lack of free will. |
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^ But it would make no sense to suddenly decide to murder somebody for no reason. Well - actually I guess people do it sometimes - but the headlines don't usually read "Man Demonstrates Free Will". More like "Man Loses His Mind." |
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Last edited by Darkmatters; 06-09-2013 at 03:39 AM.
^ I would only agree to that one against my free will! And my better judgement! |
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