Quote:That's a paradox in any world. You cannot act against your desires other than through some outside force. How is a deterministic world any different? You are an accumulation of experience onto some base personality/instincts whether the world is deterministic or not. Whether the world is deterministic or not only matters at an egocentric level where we like to think that we are masters of ourselves and our world.
Original post by walkingcarcass
what if my desire is to act against my desires? That would be a paradox in a deterministic world, but it's no obstacle to free will. Unfortunately it is undemonstratable, I could cut my own hand off (which I don't want to do) but doing so could prove nothing beyond my desire's to win an argument greater than my desire for self-preservation.
Quote:Since the entire point is that the artificial cells are deterministic this would erode the point a little don't you think?
Original post by walkingcarcass
Your gradual reconstruction experiment is a great demonstration of the liquidity of conciousness, although the construction of suitible artificial replacements for cells would have to accomodate nondeterminism (in my line of thinking). And yes, if this were possible, building the result from scratch without converting a person would be the creation of a mind. Does this mean strong A.I. is possible? Not unless a nondeterministic computer can be built whose possible actions can either be harnessed by a mind, or give rise to a mind.
Quote:we learn a posteriori [smile]
Original post by walkingcarcass
I wonder, as babies grow up, to they start out a TOTAL blank slate, where thought is concerned. Not only do they move their limbs randomly until they learn the neural patterns which give useful movement, but they seem genuinely suprised that actions are repeatable. My baby cousin recently spend a happy half hour putting sand down a crack in the floor. Do we learn modus ponens, or is it a priori?
My views on free will:
- I'd like to think it exists (that egocentric thing I mentioned before...)
- For all intents and purposes, whether we have it or not doesn't matter. The illusion is just as good as the reality (unless you know it's an illusion).
- A deterministic world is virtually indistinguishable from a non-deterministic world since the universe is a complex, nonlinear dynamic system. There is underlying order, but on the surface there appears not to be.
- For free will to exist there must be an extra-physical element to our makeup, or there must be some "as-yet unidentified ingredient of matter" to quote the OP.
- Given the last two points, and using Occam's razor, it is more likely that the world is deterministic.
btw. why hasn't anyone else mentioned that the first two points mentioned by the OP are exactly the same? If free-will is a fundamental property of matter we obviously don't know about it, it is an "as-yet unidentified ingredient of matter"...
[Edited by - lucky_monkey on February 15, 2005 5:04:01 AM]