The Undecided
Well-Known Member
If God is micro-managing everything then he controls our lives as well. If this is true then free will has to be an illusion.
Who has been telling you that God is a micro-manager?If God is micro-managing everything then he controls our lives as well. If this is true then free will has to be an illusion.
When you bake a cake, do you don't worry where the atoms are positioned, you just want it to taste good.If God is micro-managing everything then he controls our lives as well. If this is true then free will has to be an illusion.
Who has been telling you that God is a micro-manager?
Dauer, I think you make a logical mistake in this statement.I think free will is an illusion but an important one. It allows for notions like accountability which in turn influence our actions.
Dauer, I think you make a logical mistake in this statement.
You suggest free will is an illusion that allows us to have the "illusion" of accountability, which in turn would give us the illusion of influence over our actions.
If the first two states are illusional, then it would follow that the result of them would be illusional as well.
Which sounds contradictory to your original assertion that "free will is an illusion".Our beliefs lead us to act one way or another.
Please pardon my confusion.
Which sounds contradictory to your original assertion that "free will is an illusion".
If our beliefs lead us to act, and these beliefs are our beliefs, then we have free will.
CZ
I'm drawing a distinction between beliefs leading or causing us to act and our making choices that would demonstrate free will. When I speak of beliefs as leading us to act, I mean that our beliefs effect our future decisions. It is not that we choose our beliefs, but that we come to hold certain beliefs due to the degree to which they are persuasive or convincing. Any number of factors can effect the convincingness of a belief including perceived self-evidence, general societal assumption or its logically following from accepted premises. If you and I have a conversation about something in which we are in disagreement and you or I change or adjust our beliefs, I don't believe that we have chosen to do so. I believe that, given the situation, our previous experiences and our genetic makeup that there could have been no other alternative. Given enough data (a probably impossible-to-gather-and-crunch quantity) I believe we could predict the outcome of any interaction between two people. To put it differently, I don't reject the experience of free will. It is my experience too. I reject that it accurately represents the mechanisms of the brain. At the same time, I think it's possible that we do have some amount of free will, but I find it doubtful that we have as much as society's general notions of choice and accountability presume.
I'm suggesting that our brains function in a much deterministic way than most people believe. I think that the experience of free will is a side effect, a way that we cope with the disparate impulses within our brain. We tell ourselves a story that makes all of the various processes seem like a singular narrative of decision-making. It provides comfort and a sense of control to our self-awareness and supports the functioning of society by making room for laws that mete out penalties for certain types of interaction (e.g. rape, murder) based on presumed free-will and the accountability for one's actions that goes with it, and for our own, maybe non-penalty-driven "decisions" for our own benefit based around and supported by this belief in free will. These decisions are of course, in this schema, not really decisions. They're the result of calculations that take into account our belief and experience that we are beings who can choose which paths to take.
undecided said:This reminds me of the Buddhist explanation of Karma, were our present is the product of our past actions, decisions and experience, and therefore we have no control over it.
If we focus on our present and past then we can make different choices for our future
Having someone irritate me in my present is an effect of me irritating someone else in the past...
If God is micro-managing everything then he controls our lives as well. If this is true then free will has to be an illusion.
Which sounds contradictory to your original assertion that "free will is an illusion".
If our beliefs lead us to act, and these beliefs are our beliefs, then we have free will.
Please pardon my confusion.
Paladin, guess you could say in keeping with that Taoist principle that, as long as there is a "self," we alternate between attempting to micromanage from the position of a self and perhaps believing there is a micromanaging "God." When we have moved beyond "self," there is no micromanager at any level; the "whole" just is and does at all levels. earlPlease forgive the intrusion CZ, but perhaps the confusion is based in a faulty view of "YOU",and "OUR". If the software in this mind/body thing prompts behaviors consistent with the conditioning is that "free?" The belief/value system subscribed to isn't created by each supposed individual but merely adhered to due to conditioning, the "me" in question could very well be another illusion.
Remember the quote from Wei Wu Wei?
Paladin, guess you could say in keeping with that Taoist principle that, as long as there is a "self," we alternate between attempting to micromanage from the position of a self and perhaps believing there is a micromanaging "God." When we have moved beyond "self," there is no micromanager at any level; the "whole" just is and does at all levels. earl
If God is micro-managing everything then he controls our lives as well. If this is true then free will has to be an illusion.