
Mainlander
𝕱𝖗𝖊𝖊 𝖜𝖎𝖑𝖑 𝖎𝖘 𝖆𝖓 𝖎𝖑𝖑𝖚𝖘𝖎𝖔𝖓
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2024
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- #151
holy low iq
0/10 ragebait my favourite niggerkillerholy low iq
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holy low iq
0/10 ragebait my favourite niggerkillerholy low iq
you probably felt smart typing it too. "yeah bro i totally owned that philosophy nerd by... not understanding anything"holy low iq
your careful construction of counterarguments reveals the contradiction - you ACT as if minds can be changed while claiming they're predetermined. crafting persuasive rebuttals only makes sense if arguments alter outcomes. your behavior refutes your philosophy."why does a computer compute 1+1 though cpu cycles if it will write 2 to memory anyways?"
gnosis is in itself apriori, you can argue that the meta analysis of an organism of it's own choices is "spiritually transcendence" and I'm talking about the pattern not the action within the system in itself
the desire to transcend is from this world, it's like a recursive operation that produces a result outside it's bounds
I do agree that there are other systems parallel to logic that derives truth but you assume "will" is not of this world, free will cannot be defined as human action cannot be produced without the why, making it of this world
free will doesn't have a definition, you could argue it's outside of this world but as far as we know god made this world for us and it could be inside the divine realm but you can't "prove" it, and by "experience" you probably refer to intuition? Intuition is still a product of reason.
You always have a choice unless youre physically forced
But what you miss is: even when you're not physically restrained, your choices aren't truly free.
Every decision you make comes from a web of causes your upbringing, genetics, past experiences, current emotions, brain chemistry.
You don’t create your desires, your fears, your thoughts they arise in you, shaped by everything that made you who you are.
So yes, you “choose.” But the way you choose, what you prefer, what you avoid it’s all determined.
Your soul doesn’t float outside cause and effect.
It's part of the chain.
I guess I'm a compabiltist or whatever, but I think the missing part of this is the fact that our own actions also play into our "predetermination," as they do to others.your careful construction of counterarguments reveals the contradiction - you ACT as if minds can be changed while claiming they're predetermined. crafting persuasive rebuttals only makes sense if arguments alter outcomes. your behavior refutes your philosophy.
'our actions play into predetermination' - but then what distinguishes action from reaction? if everything's just dominoes, compatibilism is basically saying 'yes you're a domino but you're a special domino that feels like it's choosing to fall.'I guess I'm a compabiltist or whatever, but I think the missing part of this is the fact that our own actions also play into our "predetermination," as they do to others.
this is wrong on so many levels Idk where to begin.your careful construction of counterarguments reveals the contradiction - you ACT as if minds can be changed while claiming they're predetermined. crafting persuasive rebuttals only makes sense if arguments alter outcomes. your behavior refutes your philosophy.
in this stage of existence we exist within the physical world bound by predetermined laws, our spirit( the non physical dimension of our being) interacts with this world through matter(your body) which is why systems like magic and demons don't have as direct or profound effect as empirical logic. Achieving gnosis as you put it can only happen post mortem and if god permits it.you agree "other systems parallel to logic derive truth" - exactly. so why reduce everything to mechanical causation? you acknowledge non-logical truth systems exist but then trap intuition and will within deterministic logic. this inconsistency undermines your reductionism.
i wasn't representing him nor did i read his philosophy but through your brief description gnosis sounds like one with knowledge, speculating on this might be the same as trying to conceive a new color as this is a state exclusive to god.gnosis as "meta-analysis of patterns" misrepresents hall. he described states where analyzer-analyzed distinction dissolves - not self-reflection but direct knowing without the knower-known structure. admittedly, such states might be as unfalsifiable as your "divine realm" - but the point remains: hall wasn't describing another level of analysis.
I'm defining boundaries as in the distinction between two objects, your definition of a boundary is that of a barrier."transcendence from worldly processes producing results outside bounds" is incoherent. either boundaries are real (nothing transcends) or results genuinely exceed them (process transcends too). you can't have worldly processes with truly non-worldly results.
no dude I'm saying free will literally lacks definition, as it is outside of logic. What is free will exactly? that you are free in your will to do whatever you want? what is the nature of "wanting"? wanting in itself is constant, as in you cannot choose what you want at any point in time, I cannot just want to be seen naked in public or the like, and even if you can control what you want, what about controlling wanting what you want? it's an infinite paradoxical loop. That's why I said free will is not of this world but seems to be derived from the divine."free will lacks definition" - true, the concept is vague. but we can study experiential differences: people report and behave differently when coerced vs choosing. brain activity differs between forced actions and deliberated ones. the divine realm is unfalsifiable, but the experience of agency has observable correlates.
I already explained above why the nature of will and want disproves whatever causal relation you're hinting at."actions need reasons therefore will is worldly" assumes only mechanical causation. but consciousness might involve different causal relations - perhaps we participate in generating reasons rather than merely being pushed by them. the "why" could emerge with the choice, not before it.
this really doesn't add anything, yes there is an illusion of free will so what?intuition and reasoning might both be determined, yet intuition FEELS like receiving while logic FEELS like constructing. similarly, choice might be determined yet FEELS like deciding. this demonstrates the key point: determinism doesn't eliminate experiential qualities. we can't escape the sensation of agency just by believing we're determined.
those experience are parts of the mechanism in itself, the way biology works you need to feel that fear spike in your amygdala to choose fleeing or freezing, feelings aren't extensions but cogs in the machine.you experience deliberation, feel the weight of choices, act as if decisions matter. even if illusory, why does it FEEL like something to choose? explaining behavior without explaining experience leaves the core mystery untouched.
yes the human is a being of contradiction. It seems to me you forgot or dismissed the subconscious part of the human psyche?i'm not even arguing free will definitely exists - i'm pointing out that we inescapably EXPERIENCE agency and choice-making regardless. you'll wake up tomorrow still feeling the weight of decisions. that phenomenological reality persists whether determinism is true or not.
notice how we both CARE who wins this argument about whether arguments are predetermined. that lived contradiction might be more revealing than any philosophical proof.
You freely decided to act like a narcissistic dick head so therefore it does exist.Oh boy
The classic of the classic arguments
Do you want a high iq response why you are wrong
or do you not care?