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Discussion and Debate
Discussion and Debate
Ethics & Morality
Free will and determinism
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<blockquote data-quote="Bradskii" data-source="post: 77655150" data-attributes="member: 412388"><p>So the guy believes he has free will. Most people do. I often do. But that's not an argument for it to exist.</p><p></p><p>Then expand rather than extrapolate. If there are some good reasons for not entertaining culpability then why stop at one position and not another. Why aren't all conditions out of our control considered?</p><p></p><p>There's no room for it within the deterministic process whereby we make decisions. There's nothing to point to where you can say 'This is where free will lives, this is how it operates. Here is where we find it.' There's nothing there. That's the argument. That there is no evidence for it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bradskii, post: 77655150, member: 412388"] So the guy believes he has free will. Most people do. I often do. But that's not an argument for it to exist. Then expand rather than extrapolate. If there are some good reasons for not entertaining culpability then why stop at one position and not another. Why aren't all conditions out of our control considered? There's no room for it within the deterministic process whereby we make decisions. There's nothing to point to where you can say 'This is where free will lives, this is how it operates. Here is where we find it.' There's nothing there. That's the argument. That there is no evidence for it. [/QUOTE]
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