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| Spirituality, Consciousness, & Awareness Spirituality, beliefs, the nature of reality, consciousness, awareness, metaphysics, truth, philosophy, religion |
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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Junior Member Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 10
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Curious to know the thoughts of people here on the age old free-will/ determinism debate. Thanks, goldmbe www.discountenlightenment.com Last edited by goldmbe31; 04-01-2008 at 03:19 AM. Reason: left out URL |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| Family Member Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: St. Louis, MO
Posts: 1,100
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Free will is the essence of being human. We all have the ability to choose our actions - and accept the personal consequences of those actions. The choices we make determine our experiences and existance in this life and are what provide our spiritual selves with the learning and understanding we require to become what we were created to be. Without free will, there would be no growth. One of my favorite quotes to use when counseling Managers on how to deal with poor judgement: "Good judgement comes from experience. Experience comes from poor judgement." |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: las vegas
Posts: 123
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there is no such thing as free will. the concept of free will is often misunderstood. the same is true with determinism. here is an example of what reality is really like: a car is determined to go places, but it never will unless it gets going. ergo, we all have a determined purpose, but unless we get up off the couch our role will never be fullfilled. back to free will... what is the opposite of determinism? many people misbelieve it's free will, but it is not. it's chaos. look around you. there is no chaos. everything is ordered, driven and with purpose. belief if free will springs from a belief in ego. both are false and the former is an artifact of the latter. |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: las vegas
Posts: 123
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let's just use logic.... what is the opposite of determinism? non-determinism, meaning the inability to foresee or predict the outcome of anything. this is also defined as chaos. but lets look around us. we are able, with varying degress of probablity, to determine, predict and foresee through time the outcome of everything. probablity is a fuction of information. the less information that is known about a thing, the greater the probability of outcomes. therefore, for example, if all information is known about a coin flip, which includes the coin, tosser and environment, then the outcome can be determined with 100% accuracy. probablity, chance and free will are artifacts created due to a lack of information. this is why it is of upmost importance to know thyself. once we understand ourselves, our purpose in this universe becomes clear - like a coin flip. |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Administrator Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: Las Vegas, NV
Posts: 4,593
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I wrote a nifty blog entry about this very topic as I was trying to figure it out as well. Here tis: Destiny vs. Free Will |
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| | #6 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: las vegas
Posts: 123
| Quote:
this is a complicated subject. there is no such thing as free will or determinism, in the same way there is no such thing as temperature or time. temperature and time are averages of particles moving through space. the same is true with each of us. we are all products of causality. however, causality does not equate determinism (despite my previous posts). i'll explain and expand. we are connected, not independent of our environment. just as a flower will bloom under the right environment, the same is true with each of us. if we are in a bad, non-productive environment, moving to a better area is not a indicator or exercise of free will. it is an indicator of growth - the following of our path. but likewise, the following of our path does not mean literally destiny, fate or determinism, for we must take action to walk our path, we must take action for growth, which goes back to an implication of free will. the terms "free will" and "determinism" are not adequate labels explain what happens. the Buddhas phrase "inter-dependent arising" seems a better-suited term. | |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Pasadena, CA
Posts: 245
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I think free will and determinism are as Joe said highly misinterpreted. Free will and Determinism don't really exist as seperate entities. Rather, they are like two ends of one pole. They work together. We all have free will because we all have the ability to respond. But there's also the aspect of determinism because we don't choose the stimulus that we're provided with. We can however accept the stimulus and work in a natural cooperation using our choice to respond. Hope that made sense. =) |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| Family Member Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 2,203
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I believe in determinism, that action leads to consequence and that there are basic inviolable rules to the universe that direct this cause-effect cascade. Human actions happen to be a part of this cascade, simultaneously causing and being caused by the surrounding environment, not being independent of them. However, that doesn't invalidate free will. Just because the future is predetermined doesn't mean that it matters that it's predetermined. You can try to predict the future, but by predicting it you allow yourself the possibility of changing it, therefore making your prediction moot. If you know the future and change it, then the future you knew wasn't really the future. So is there really any difference between the future being the result of our conscious decisions of free-will independent of the laws of the universe, and being predetermined but unknowable? If you can't know the future, then why does it matter whether or not you can change it? |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| Banned Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 9,613
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The average human being possesses a small degree of free will. At all other times, determinism applies. I say that the average human being has only a small degree of free will, because most of the time, we function on autopilot. In accordance with our social conditioning; habits; and automated responses, rather than via the exercise of free will. We are more evolved than earthworms, yet strikingly similar in some ways. Most of the time, we respond automatically to stimuli, just as earthworms do. Krishnamurti put it another way - most of the human race is asleep. These are examples of the limitations of free will: 1. Someone says something to you, and you immediately lose your temper, a reaction which you later regret. 2. You are worrying about something which you already know you cannot help. You wish to stop, but you can't. 3. When you are at a restaurant and the waitress asks you what drink you want, you instinctively say, "Coke" because you have been programmed by Coke advertisements to say so. 4. Without quite knowing why, you seek to do the things which your church / parents / school / government wants you to do. 5. You stick a cigarette in your mouth and light up, even though this very morning, you'd told yourself to quit smoking. 6. You are not able to live in accordance with your personal values. 7. When you were a kid, your teacher told you that you were lazy & stupid. 30 years later, you still cannot shake off that belief although you would like to. Therefore you continue to feel bad about yourself. |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Banned Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Canada
Posts: 185
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You guys describe how free will is limited, and you are right, if it exists it would be. We cannot jump 10 feet in the air etc..., and other peoples free wills around us would limit our own. But just because you point out this fact does not mean that free will and determinism are compatible. You have missed the deeper aspect to the situation. That limited amount of free will could still be an illusion, could be causality underneath, and therefore predetermined. So limited free will does not prove it's compatible with true determinism Why did you get up to eat, because you were hungry. Why did you get up to eat when you were full, because you wanted to prove me wrong lol. You see everything we choose has a causal reason behind it. no matter what. So our choices are predetermined Going deeper; our brains are made of the same deterministic matter as everything else. Our mental activity is electrical impulses, electricity is the flow of electrons, electrons are particles of matter, matter obeys cause and effect. Our minds are not exempt from the laws of physics. so our brains are predetermined So what is free will? it would be the ability to spontaneously control cause and effect. so full determinism or total chaos(randomness) would both negate free will. so if quantum mechanics is true its uncertainty principles(randomness) would disprove determinism, but that would just replace on free will killer with another. so quantum mechanics chaos/randomness does not prove free will exists and you cant bring the supernatural in to support free will, one unproven thing does not prove another unproven thing. being an adult in reality isn't like being a spoiled child at home, you can't have everything you want. just because you believe something or want something to be true doesn't make it so. so the supernatural does not prove free will exists, Erin. haha i prefer to have a real discussion of the existence of free will, not a childlike one where people use the supernatural(which they've decided is true because they want it to be) to explain and justify free will(which they want to be true). why not save yourself the hassle and just say free will exists because you say so. lol i make the truth what i want, i don't make what i want into the truth so i consider everyones post above mine refuted, and free will stands as non existent. oh and don't try and play the moral card with me either. theres three ways of looking at it from the moral perspective. 1-if free will doesn't exist we cant hold someone personally responsible for their crime. but we would still have to take action to prevent it from happening again. if lightening strikes you it had no control but you still put up lightening rods. so we would still lock criminals up. 2-if free will doesn't exist us locking them up would be out of our control too, so they would still receive 'punishment'. 3-or even us holding them personally responsible could still be part of the illusion just as free will is, so we would still continue to give them punishment. so lack of free will doesn't affect morality or justice in anyway. another reason why people argue for free will is freedom. if we have no free will we have no freedom right? well it doesn't matter, because everything would continue to be exactly as it is now. which is obviously good enough for everyone. so if free will doesn't exist then obviously we never really valued true freedom to begin with, therefore there would be no loss. so lack of free will does not effect our current level of freedom in anyway. Last edited by joecooool; 04-01-2008 at 11:06 AM. Reason: ey |
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| | #11 (permalink) | ||
| Banned Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 9,613
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More to the point, your reference to the laws of physics, in the context of the present discussion, indicates your view that if X is referable to the laws of physics, then X is predetermined. I'm not so sure I agree with this. Firstly the laws of physics, as we currently understand them, don't deal very well with consciousness. Mass, momentum, energy, force, frequency, wavelength, time, distance - these we can fit into a physics equation and use as building blocks for each other. But so far I haven't seen a physics equation into which you can insert "consciousness". For example, suppose I ask a physicist to prove, according to the laws of physics, that one rock has more mass than another rock. This is quite possible. I may ask the physicist to prove, according to the laws of physics, that one rock moving at high velocity has more energy than another rock (stationary). This is also quite possible. But if I ask the physicist to prove, according to the laws of physics, that he has more consciousness than a rock, that is not quite possible. Even if intuitively we know that this must be so. The laws of physics simply cannot take consciousness into account, in their equations which describe reality. Secondly, you have assumed that the fact that X is referable to the laws of physics means that X is predetermined. This, IMO, is also a debatable proposition. Simply because the laws of physics ultimately contain elements of non-determinacy, and introduce probability instead. Refer for example to the collapse of the wavefunction (specifically the fact that a particle is neither a particle nor a wave, until a certain event occurs, and ujtil such event, it exists merely as a mathematical ghost). Refer also to Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. Add quantum entanglement into the picture, and if we assume that every quantum particle has collided with at least one other quantum particle, what we get instead seems to be ...... ..... an extremely uncertain, quite un-predetermined universe. ------ In addition, this argument of yours: Quote:
Assume that I have a reason for everything I do. While there may be a reason for everything I do, the reason is not necessarily the cause of the action. For example, at 8 pm tonight, I may be full, or I may be hungry. In either case, I may or may not get up to eat. Whether I ultimately get up or do not get up to eat, there will be a reason for doing or not doing so. But it is not predetermined whether I do get up to eat or not. If you disagree, then tell me whether I will get up at 8 pm to eat or not. Whatever your answer, you may be right, or you may be wrong. I myself do not know. It's not pre-determined. Furthermore, we have assumed that I have a reason for everything I do. In fact, this may not be true. There could be many things which I do, for which there is no particular reason, or whose reasons are unknown to myself, or whose reasons are ultimately not capable of being known (something like quantum particles existing as mathematical ghosts, prior to existing as a particle or a wave). Last edited by Acting Like Godot; 04-02-2008 at 02:51 AM. | ||
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| | #12 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 98
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Ofcourse there is no free will! My existence and my brain activity does not break the laws of nature! Someday my body can be rebuilt atom by atom and the perfected laws of physics can and predict my every movement. The perfected laws of pscyhology based on physics, can predict my every thought. Free-will is for the egotistical who wish to have power beyond that of nature itself. |
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| | #13 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: las vegas
Posts: 123
| on the contrary, there is a growing opinion among the scientific community that the universe only appears random on the fundamental level due to a lack of information about it. the less information that is known about a system, the greater it's appearance of randomness, and that seems to be the case with the conventional theory.
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| | #14 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: las vegas
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