On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 11:19 AM, Craig Weinberg <whatsons...@gmail.com> wrote:

>> That would mean it is impossible to have
>> voluntary control of one's actions independently of physics.
>
>
> No, it means that physics must support voluntary control of one's actions.
>
>>
>> Now you
>> are saying the opposite.
>
>
> Nope. The problem is that you assume that we know a lot about physics
> already. I think that we have an extremely, laughably primitive
> understanding of physics at this point in history. We may be too stupid and
> arrogant to figure that out though. We like to think that the universe which
> we experience is the actual universe when it suits our expectations, but we
> decide that it must be nothing like our experience of the universe when it
> suits other expectations. We are clueless and clueless of how clueless we
> are.

As I have said many times, it would be a simple matter to prove
experimentally that biological processes go against the mechanistic
laws of physics as we currently understand them. Why has it never been
observed in the history of science?


-- 
Stathis Papaioannou

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