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DigiNut
You kids get off my lawn!

Registered: Dec 2002
Location: Toronto, Self-proclaimed Centre of the Universe
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It may be true that the decisions we make are a result of our brains, anatomy, and environment - but there is a distinct missing link in your logic between the notion that our decisions are predetermined and the ideal that everyone has the right to a decent life.
Why should everyone have the right to a decent life?
Everybody wants something for nothing. Nobody has the "right" to a good life.
There are many people who do nothing but good deeds and still have shitty lives. If they don't have the right to decent lives, why should murderers?
Punishing murderers isn't just about deterrent - it's about keeping them away from society long enough not to do it again until they can learn from their mistake (which in some cases, might be for the rest of their lives). It's for the safety of the people. If you call it "choice" then those murderers will learn to make better "choices" - if you call it "brain chemistry", then seeing the consequences of their actions should alter their "brain chemistry" enough so that their "automatic" reaction next time is not to kill anyone.
You see, even if choices are predetermined, it still means we're responsible as a society to "induce" people to make the right choices, which is governed by the same system of reward and punishment that's always been used. It's been thoroughly tested and proven on all other animals, and we are no different - reward encourages, punishment discourages, and people, just as animals, can be conditioned to act a certain way by doing just that.
Our responsibility is not to ensure their happiness. It is impossible to ensure the happiness of everyone, because eventually one man will want something that makes another man unhappy. A system must be in place to determine who gets his way, even if that system is anarchy and survival of the fittest.
Bottom line - you can define "choice" however you like, but if you redefine "choice" then you have to redefine "society" too, because society is formed by choice. "No free choice" is pretty much a dead-end philosophy that doesn't work in practice, it's basically communism.
___________________
My party schedule:
2009-02-21 - DJ Attention @ I'm So Popular
2009-06-18 - DJ Annoying @ People Need To Know Where I'll Be
2012-11-32 - DJ Insufferable ɸ Or At Least the Stalkers I Complain About
2048-06-66 - Spastic & Whocares ¶ Although I'm Actually Flattered
9999-45-81 - Tweaker Gimp ☼ I Probably Won't Even Go To This But I Have To Make Sure I Fill Up All The Available Space Here
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Dec-28-2003 17:58
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trancaholic
Danish Prophet of Doom

Registered: Oct 2000
Location: Aalborg
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Re: free choice?
| quote: | Originally posted by St_Andrew
I know a lot of you think this is bullshit...
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Ahh. A philosophical topic for once. Lovely 
| quote: | Originally posted by St_Andrew
A decision is based either upon a person's environment or upon a person's own brain (his knowledge and genetics). I can not see how the individual can in any way change this. We are born with our brain and we are placed in an environment, so where is the choice?
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I see no flaws in your logic, but, assuming that you are right, I would like to reverse the argument and ask: Are there such things as "individuals"? Or, equivalently, do each of us possess an essence? If our decision making is merely a function of previous experience and some constant factor defined by the brains we are born with, then how do we become individuals?
To me, an individual is something with its own preferences and which is distinguishable from other individuals by its acts. But, as we just established, these preferences and choices are deterministically related to our biological starting point and experiences, so how can we in any way claim them to be "ours"? We are as little individuals as we have free choice.
Now, I do not believe that we have no essence nor that we are not individuals. I believe that we have such a thing as a percept, which allows us to interpret experiences and initiate reflection on our own acts. This percept would be something like that advocated for by Kant - a non-physical interface between the storage and computing unit of the brain and our sensors and actuators (eyes, hands, etc.).
It doesn't really do a lot for the case of free choice, as you can simply say that free choice is then a function of experiences, initial brain structure, *and* the percept, but it makes me feel better to be a deterministic machine of non-secular make, than a deterministic machine produced by biology and experience.
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Dec-28-2003 19:15
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TranceGiant
randomly disappoints

Registered: Jun 2001
Location: (Strudel)-City that never sleeps
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Re: Re: free choice?
| quote: | Originally posted by trancaholic
Now, I do not believe that we have no essence nor that we are not individuals. I believe that we have such a thing as a percept, which allows us to interpret experiences and initiate reflection on our own acts. |
'soul' ?
I think where our minds stops and our ability to comprehend is exhausted is the question of the *origin* of "it" if "it" (indivudalism, "soul", identity, life) exists at all. It's the micro version of the "how did the universe 'start' and what was there before?" problem. Same thing basically. Meant to be left unanswered since everything which might answer it, is part of the problem. WE, who are the very mystery, are supposed to solve it. Running in circles. Solving an equation with an unknown variable. In fact this variable is the equation itself.
I do think, however, that we aren't destined for simply following an unescapable clear line of action-reaction. It's the biggest achievements that has been reached by geniously breaking the cycle, doing the "unexpected", risking, fulfilling creativity.
"cogito, ergo sum", anybody? I think therefore I am. We think ABOUT thinking and therefore surely are. This makes our existence absolute and complete for the very moment instead of the mere sum of our past.
I make no point whatsoever, but it's good to write a few lines off my chest. At least I tried to convey a feeling 
___________________
"Those are my principles, if you don't like them... well, I have others.”
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Dec-28-2003 22:10
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TranceGiant
randomly disappoints

Registered: Jun 2001
Location: (Strudel)-City that never sleeps
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Dec-28-2003 22:18
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NeoPhono
Übermensch

Registered: Sep 2003
Location: In Orbit
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St. Andrew, it almost seems as if you're debating whether making an educated decision removes one's ability to free choice. I think these are two seperate issues. I would hope that when one makes any choice, s/he thinks of all possible outcomes before they fully commit. I would also hope that the person makes the choice that is most beneficial for what they are trying to accomplish (within reason, e.g. not killing someone for your gain). This said, the person always has the option of making a decision that goes against what a rational individual would do in that circumstance (children and criminals do it all the time). Therefore, I would say that just because many of our choices are obvious based on looking at the outcome, we are in no way "forced" to take that path.
My blanket approach to the free will debate is that because we do not have the ability to read the future, whether or not we have free will or a predetermined course of actions is not relevant. Because we are not able to see decisions before we make them, we at least have the illusion of free will, and no way of telling whether this illusion is in fact free will, or just our inability to see the "set path" already laid out before us.
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Dec-28-2003 22:31
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DrUg_Tit0
e^(i*pi)+1=0

Registered: Nov 2002
Location: Zagreb, Croatia
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Re: free choice?
| quote: | Originally posted by St_Andrew
So how do i think we should apply this in society? Make everyone irresponsible for the actions? No that would not make sense. We still have to punish murders as a deterrent example (for the ones with knowledge and genes/raised that follow god and bad). BUT we should take care about this people, we should not let them rotten in some dark prison, they should also have the right to a decent life, even though they are murderers. This apply to all kind of people that are disadvantaged of todays society (poor, less smart, sick etc). Everyone should have the right to a decent life, nothing really is their fault. Though the problem is that everyone could not have a perfect life without doing anything because in that case no one would want to be a doctor, CEO or something else that would take up a lot of your time of their lives. It is all about to find the perfect balance and to make everyones raising/environment as good as possible.
So a person's failure is not really the persons fault, it is the society's fault.
Take some time think of it, there is no free choice. |
Now, while I do agree with the first part of your post, I certainly disagree with the second part. Diginut has already expressed most of my opinions on this matter, so I won't have much to add to that. Free choice has nothing to do with reward or punishment. Whether you like to call people's decisions free choice or conditioned response, in both cases they'll consider the consequences of their actions, and in both cases will the principle of reward and punishment lead to the same results. That principle is therefore in no way connected with the free choice agenda. Now, we can move on to what the punishments for unwanted actions should be. The best solution would be that if someone is a serious threat to the society, that person should be removed from it. Smaller crimes are not a serious threat, so they can freely be dealt with in terms of short prison sentences. But, as far as the big crimes go (mass murder, genocides, serial killers...), there should be no way such people should ever be reintroduced into the society. The very actions those people took show that they are not rational and sane beings. There is usually no cure for them, as those people will murder again when they come back from the prison, and there's definitely no reason why those people should be funded by the society to spend the rest of their miserable lives in a cell. A simple fact is that the needs of the many usually outweight the needs of the few, so it's a choice between two lesser evils. On one hand, we have a poor poor murderer who won't experience the thrills of freedom/life, and on the other hand we have a society where murder goes almost unpunished, something that can lead to desasterous results. Now, regardless of whether you look at these people as conditioned automatons or free willed individuals, there's no reason whatsoever to keep them alive. If their actions are the product of their free will, then it is obvious we are talking to someone who enjoys killing, regardless of the possible consequences. If we are talking about actions that are a conditioned response, we have a person whose genes and society have conditioned him/her to do the very same ting, to kill for pleasure regardless of the consequences. In both cases the solution is the same.
___________________
1+1=10
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Dec-29-2003 12:41
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Shakka
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Feb 2003
Location:
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Re: free choice?
In my opinion, this is a pretty weak paper. Not because your thesis is necessarily bad, but moreso because you really don't say/argue anything. That which you do argue is incredibly thin.
| quote: | Originally posted by St_Andrew
Free choice - By me 
This is what most of the modern world is built upon, but what is really free choice? Does it really exists? I state it does not, not really.
Free choice exists in a way, because every man takes his/her own decisions. But the problem is that every decision already has a given outcome. No one in this world controls his/her decisions. |
I'm trying to remember...did this first part come from The Matrix? It's an oversimplified argument that only exists in a vacuum given only 1 variable such that A+B=C, however the real world has nearly infinite variables and consequences to every action. Some are readily identifiable, some aren't. For example, in Chaos Theory it has been surmised that the result of a butterfly flapping it's wings in China could somehow result in a Tornado in the Midwestern U.S. (Don't ask me how, go read the theory). Even then, doesn't every choice in essence open up a myriad of potential new choices resulting from the initial choice, in essence giving potentially countless other longer term outcomes? There aren't just 2 possible outcomes in any decision(I could choose to go take a plane or take a train, or I could choose to take a boat, or I could choose to simply not go at all, forfeiting the chance of meeting a future business partner, which would open a whole new window of pursuant choices). Bottom line, it's an overly simplistic argument that doesn't seem realistic to me.
| quote: | | A decision is based either upon a person's environment or upon a person's own brain (his knowledge and genetics). I can not see how the individual can in any way change this. We are born with our brain and we are placed in an environment, so where is the choice? |
You are born with a brain, but it is undeveloped. How you choose to condition it will have a large impact on your approach to decision making. You may choose to sniff glue, kill your brain cells, and then be rendered a vegetable, depending on others to make all of your choices for you. You may also choose to do something else--again, there is always more than 1 alternative which always adds more uncertainty.
| quote: | | Now you are thinking, “no that is not true, we do have a choice”, but then please tell me how else can we take our decisions? THERE IS NO OTHER WAY! |
Not so sure why you're so emphatic here. I don't see how the argument makes sense.
| quote: | Examples:
A person is in a store, he is going to buy some tomatoes, the store has 2 kinds, one that is cheap (but not the best) and one that is delicious (but expensive). If this person is rich (he knows that --> knowledge) and/or love tomatoes (genetics) he will buy the expensive one. He had a free choice, but where were the free choice, really? It was already given what he would take.| quote: |
Not so. It might depend on what the tomatoes look like, how much money he has on him, etc. He may just decide not to purchase any tomatoes. Maybe he buys some tomato seeds and plants a tomato garden when he gets home. You just can't simplify life down to an either/or equation.
[quote]There is an election, every person vote what they think is the best for them/society. First of all some only think of themselves and others think of the whole (this depend of their raising, environment and their genetics, but still they do not control if they are ego or not.). Secondly everyone does not have the same knowledge (some persons knows a lot (want to learn, gen/environmental thing), some do not, nothing you can affect). There is no other ways you take your decisions in an election. So everyone has a free will to vote on whatever they want in the election, but the decision is already given based upon the things i just mentioned |
Surely you can't believe that an election would be that predictable? If that were the case we could've avoided the whole Florida Recount issue and Chad would still be a cool name.
| quote: | | Another example of this is that most middle classers continue to be middle class, most over class continue to be that, and working class continue to be that, etc. This is clearly NOT a coincidence. |
Plenty of people are able to move from one class to another--it depends on a lot of their decisions, as well as plenty of other variables such as timing, and even other intangibles that they have no control over (like luck).
| quote: | | I could take endless of more examples but i hope you got my point now. |
Do go on, I have yet to get the point/see a convincing example that proves that choice does not exist and that a specific set of outcomes must always accompany a particular choice.
| quote: | | So a person's failure is not really the persons fault, it is the society's fault. |
Sounds like typical leftist victimization in order to avoid personal responsibility. Certainly this can't be how you actually think?
[quoteTake some time think of it, there is no free choice. |
Sure there is. I just chose to write a scathing review. Possible outcomes: I could get flamed, I could get a sensible reply, I could get no reply, I could get banned, or nothing might happen. I certainly can't predict what you'll say in response, though I have a good idea since we've debated before and I know your stance on several issues. There is plenty of free choice.
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Dec-29-2003 22:17
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St_Andrew
I <3 NYC

Registered: May 2003
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
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| quote: | Originally posted by DigiNut
It may be true that the decisions we make are a result of our brains, anatomy, and environment - but there is a distinct missing link in your logic between the notion that our decisions are predetermined and the ideal that everyone has the right to a decent life.
Why should everyone have the right to a decent life? |
why not? if they are born into a life, why should not everyone at least be born into a decent life?
| quote: | Everybody wants something for nothing. Nobody has the "right" to a good life.
There are many people who do nothing but good deeds and still have shitty lives. If they don't have the right to decent lives, why should murderers? |
everyone should have the right to a decent life, also those people who does good for society.
| quote: | | Punishing murderers isn't just about deterrent - it's about keeping them away from society long enough not to do it again until they can learn from their mistake (which in some cases, might be for the rest of their lives). It's for the safety of the people. If you call it "choice" then those murderers will learn to make better "choices" - if you call it "brain chemistry", then seeing the consequences of their actions should alter their "brain chemistry" enough so that their "automatic" reaction next time is not to kill anyone. |
true true, but in prison they should be treated as humans and also they should be rehabilitated, i'm not sure if they understand what's wrong all times and many of them will never be rehabilitated and therefore they should get e decent life i prison.
| quote: | | You see, even if choices are predetermined, it still means we're responsible as a society to "induce" people to make the right choices, which is governed by the same system of reward and punishment that's always been used. It's been thoroughly tested and proven on all other animals, and we are no different - reward encourages, punishment discourages, and people, just as animals, can be conditioned to act a certain way by doing just that. |
yes of course, but i think it's better to stake on awards than on punishments (which is also proven to work on animals). also it's societies task to make everyones environment as good as possible in the first place (equal schools etc).
| quote: | | Bottom line - you can define "choice" however you like, but if you redefine "choice" then you have to redefine "society" too, because society is formed by choice. "No free choice" is pretty much a dead-end philosophy that doesn't work in practice, it's basically communism. |
Partly true, society is formed by choice, my theory is that we cannot steer choice, nor do i think that we can steer society in whole... i can't see how those two has to contradict each other. and no i DO NOT support communist.
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Dec-29-2003 23:02
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St_Andrew
I <3 NYC

Registered: May 2003
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
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| quote: | Originally posted by NeoPhono
St. Andrew, it almost seems as if you're debating whether making an educated decision removes one's ability to free choice. I think these are two seperate issues. I would hope that when one makes any choice, s/he thinks of all possible outcomes before they fully commit. I would also hope that the person makes the choice that is most beneficial for what they are trying to accomplish (within reason, e.g. not killing someone for your gain). This said, the person always has the option of making a decision that goes against what a rational individual would do in that circumstance (children and criminals do it all the time). Therefore, I would say that just because many of our choices are obvious based on looking at the outcome, we are in no way "forced" to take that path. |
everyone try to make the choices as good as possible for them, some just don't know what's good and what's bad etc, that's why there is "bad" choices.
and no, i'n not saying that education removes ones ability to make choices (there was no ability before either), i say it affect the way we take them. there is no such thing as free choice, so after school, we just have more to base our decisions on so in a way school help us to take some decisions...
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Dec-29-2003 23:11
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Nadi
Not quite an addict
Registered: Dec 2001
Location: Los Angeles, Californa,
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Re: Re: Re: free choice?
| quote: | | I see no flaws in your logic, but, assuming that you are right, I would like to reverse the argument and ask: Are there such things as "individuals"? |
Who knows. I don't think its important because the majority of society believes there are and I dont think theres really anyone who could really comprehend and accept us all being numbers. We have to live under the assumption that there are individuals regardless of whether or not it is correct.
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Dec-29-2003 23:20
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