Quote:
Originally Posted by this is fun You think that there cannot be two answers/behaviours equally good and acceptable prompted by the same initial information input? |
I'm not talking about them being "good/bad" or "acceptable/unacceptable", but merely that it would not be
consequent.
Also, I am not only talking about information
input, but also the pre-information that elaborates the input. As I said on another topic:
Think of the information to make a decision upon ("subject") as ingredients. And think of what makes people different (their "identity") as ingredients as well.
If they mix only the "subject"-ingredients (e.g. believe in God or not) they will behave differently, but if they mix all their "identity"-ingredients (e.g. what experiences, cultural history, feelings, a, b, c, d, etc. and all other variables makes them want to believe in God), they would behave as if they had one identity and will behave the same, as a direct consequence.