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| son et lumire | i have been pondering the question lately of "mind or brain?" and it brings me to the concept of free will. i was in a discussion the other night where a few buddies of mine told me that decisions made are in the end inevitable and that simply didnt make any sense. really you can break down the concept of mind/free will and matter/ie. brain functions and body functions. to say that the brain controls every apect of the body, including decisions and reactions seems silly to me. the choice may be inevitable, but ultimately the human mind has the choice to itself: are there more pros/less cons to go left? or are there more pros to go right? materialism is science seem to mesh. the materialists took over nearly every single catagory of scientific thought and cotinue to break it down into a series of chemical reactions of the brain or nervous system, all except the concept of mind. so how bout it, mind, brain, or both? ![]() ---------------- -tarantism ![]() | |
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| Understanding | Re: Free Will Quote:
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| ong RA guru dev RA | Re: Free Will Quote:
The reason it may seem that life is filled with "inevidablitys" or things that are "meant to happen" is because of the way we react to life. We are born into the world as very impressionable. We learn from our parents. How our parents behave shapes how we behave. how our parents behave was shaped by all of their experiences. And also, genetics contribute to how be behave as well. But that is a direct cause of conforming to the environment that your heritage came from. Your genetics are caused directly by where all your family came from. For example: Familys that grew up on the hot african plains... turned out with really dark skin... where as, irish people, being so far up north, hardly got any sun compared to these people.... which caused them to be light skinned. Same influences come from the nutrition we consume, the environment that we are in, the things we see. Pretty much everything we experience shapes our family DNA. In that sense, a lot of how we act, behave, socialize, physical atrributes and such... can most likely be determined by our family history. so, to sum things up, both atmosphere and genetics play a roll in shaping who we are as beings. Atmosphere probably plays a bigger roll... but I think genetics are still important, no doubt. And if you think about it in these terms... psychologists can pretty much determine how a person will react in a certain situation IF that psychologist has enough background on that person's family history/upbringing/genetics/social life and such aspects. BUT is this cause for inevitablitiy? maybe somewhat.... but I think there are also a lot of random factors that cause our characteristic inevitable nature to be more random. but who knows? There are tons of different perspectives you can take on this subject. This is just one of them that I have thought about and contemplated. ---------------- Rofl waffles | ||
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| Exhausted Gondolier | There have been threads about free will, here in the philosophy forums, you might be interested in some of the results of this search. It's often a good idea before starting a new thread, about a topic not unlikely to have been discussed, I used advanced search with the "titles only" option and found them. ![]() ---------------- Who's afraid of the Big Black Hole????? Go Black Hole! W the Black Hole! ![]() ![]() ![]() Hasta que el agujero negro nos traga, siempre! Hypography Forum PITA...... er, Administrator. Last edited by Qfwfq; 02-15-2006 at 12:44 AM. | |
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| son et lumire | Re: Free Will Dear Magic: you completely skipped free will. i do not know if this is becuase you do not believe in it or if it is becuase you do not have an explaination for that within your explaination. a lot of what you seemed to be explaining reminded me of evolutionary theory, at least the genetics aspect, and the atmosphere aspect would entail who is present at the time of choice, and whose opinions play a greater manipulative role on the decider's ultimate decision. i agree with all of that, only in my conclusions i have included the concept of free will into that argument, that is to say that whoever is making the decision can act in either direction, for better or worse, regardless of all influences. i say CAN becuase, while this is always the case, it rarely is only the decider who influances his or her own decision. there is almost always on outside factor, be it a friend or a family member, maybe even the weather that can effect the outcome of any decision. however, i am getting off topic. what i am attemptiong to explain here is that: 1. choices are inevitable, and we face them nearly constantly. 2. when discussing Decision, one must include the factor of free will, which tells us that there is a seemingly infinate number of outcomes to any one choice, 3. now we must factor in genetics, be it family history or past lessons, also your inharent mannerisms, (family obesity, for example, could effect any number of eating decisions). 4. upon factoring in free will and genetics, one must now fator in outside influence of any kind, which will ultimately shape the outcome. this could include family or friends, as explained above. in conclusion, the outcome of a decision is inevitable but beforehand undecided, and only after a decision has been made can it be deemed inevitable. hope that makes sense, and i hope it provides insight into an alternative way of thinking. ---------------- -tarantism ![]() | |
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| Doing the Impossible | Re: Free Will Tartanism, your friend is a fatalist. There is no such thing as destiny. The world is your to explore, or not to explore. Your decisions take you through life. Fatalism is a way of shirking responsibility. Don't buy into it. Bill ---------------- aka TheBigDog - Hypography Full Freaking Moderator Become a Hypography sponsor! The truth is incontravertible; malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end there it is. - Winston Churchill TheBigDog's recommended reading: The Science of Success - Charles G. Koch A neutron goes into a bar and asks the bartender, "How much for a beer?" The bartender replies, "For you, no charge." | |
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| bike | Re: Free Will yes, when it comes to free will, DEFINITELY check out all of the other tons of threads on the topic. mr. big dog, Yeah, the world is free or whatever but even your most random attempt to be funny was going to happen all along. every action has an equal and opposite reaction. free will, IMHO, does not exist. Funny, huh? Anyways....yeah, read those threads. a lot of good information in them. ---------------- "Rome falls nine times an hour" ![]() ![]() | |
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| Doing the Impossible | Re: Free Will Quote:
Bill ---------------- aka TheBigDog - Hypography Full Freaking Moderator Become a Hypography sponsor! The truth is incontravertible; malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end there it is. - Winston Churchill TheBigDog's recommended reading: The Science of Success - Charles G. Koch A neutron goes into a bar and asks the bartender, "How much for a beer?" The bartender replies, "For you, no charge." | ||
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| Existing | Re: Free Will No matter how I look at it, I cannot accept that our brains are immune to the laws of physics. A thought exists because of the firing of neurons and interaction of chemicals. Those are physical processes. A thought is governed by laws, and cannot be free. ---------------- Hypography Forum Administrator | |
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