of course there are always going to be outside influences in making
any decisions,, these factors are all part of any decisions,,  I wonder if
the decision to cast your lot into the zombie lottery.
Allan

On Sat, Aug 6, 2011 at 4:00 PM, Vam <[email protected]> wrote:

> "... but is your decision freely made ?"
>
>
> What is meant by " freely " made ?
>
> Do you mean ' without being under the influence of gravity ' ?
>
> There will always be a dynamics in our background, and some in the
> foreground. So ?
>
> On Aug 6, 4:24 am, paradox <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Do you really, Allan? Or do you really think you do? If you always
> > have a choice of 'A', 'B', or 'C', but you were always ever going to
> > choose 'C', you have free will, but is your decision freely made?
> >
> > On Aug 5, 8:04 pm, Allan Heretic <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > > You lays have free will no matter how you seeing it created.  It is the
> consequences of those choices that can be a bitch,
> > > Allan
> >
> > > On 4 aug. 2011, at 17:48, paradox <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > > > There are a number of approaches to this question, Jo; but
> essentially
> > > > and in summary (and i do a great injustice to a very powerful
> > > > philosophical school), the deterministic tradition suggests that
> since
> > > > we''re fundamentally bounded chemical systems immersed in a "sea" of
> > > > ever more elaborate chemical processes, regulated by immutable
> > > > (replicable and predictive) physical laws, and nothing else (which
> > > > takes you back to the mind/brain question), our actions are no more
> > > > than expressions of these chemical processes, constrained at an
> > > > aggregate level by universal physical laws. When we think we make
> > > > decisions based on choice, it is the mind "stroking" itself since, in
> > > > terms of "proximate" action, we know that our decisions are preceeded
> > > > in time by a neuro-electrcal "footprint" (interesting work by
> Benjamin
> > > > Libet, presented in his book "Mind Time"); and in terms of more
> > > > deliberative action, we are pretty certain to make the same decisions
> > > > over and over again given the same set of variables, since our
> > > > cognition is hard wired, and its operations are governed by the self
> > > > same chemical processes and physical laws. Hence the question: do we
> > > > have free will? and if we do, how much free will do we have?
> >
> > > > On Aug 2, 7:44 pm, Jo <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > >> I don't understand how some can say we don't have free will. You can
> > > >> choose to do anything you want at any given time. How is that not
> free
> > > >> will?
> >
> > > >> On Aug 2, 12:51 pm, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > > >>> "We have access to a technology that would have looked like sorcery
> in
> > > >>> Descartes's day: the ability to peer inside someone's head and read
> > > >>> their thoughts. Unfortunately, that doesn't take us any nearer to
> > > >>> knowing whether they are sentient. "Even if you measure brainwaves,
> > > >>> you can never know exactly what experience they represent," says
> > > >>> psychologist Bruce Hood at the University of Bristol, UK.  If
> > > >>> anything, brain scanning has undermined Descartes's maxim. You,
> too,
> > > >>> might be a zombie. "I happen to be one myself," says Stanford
> > > >>> University philosopher Paul Skokowski. "And so, even if you don't
> > > >>> realise it, are you." Skokowski's assertion is based on the belief,
> > > >>> particularly common among neuroscientists who study brain scans,
> that
> > > >>> we do not have free will. There is no ghost in the machine; our
> > > >>> actions are driven by brain states that lie entirely beyond our
> > > >>> control. "I think, therefore I am" might be an illusion.
> > > >>> So, it may well be that you live in a computer simulation in which
> you
> > > >>> are the only self-aware creature. I could well be a zombie and so
> > > >>> could you. Have an interesting day." (from a recent New Scientist)
> >
> > > >>> We range over debates in free will and what it is to be human. So
> far
> > > >>> we haven't established free will or even that we are not merely
> > > >>> avatars in 'something else's game'.
> >
> > > >>> I wonder whether there are advantages in considering ourselves as
> > > >>> creatures limited by programming and also capable of it?- Hide
> quoted text -
> >
> > > >> - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
> >
> > > - Show quoted text -
>



-- 
 (
  )
I_D Allan

If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,

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