Dark Matter
Rising Star
Well...as Gibran said earlier on the subject, can you desrcibe me how a choice made with "free will" would be made? Just give us an example.
benzyme said:I decide I want a sip of water, then freely make the decision to pick up a glass of water, and drink from it. I just showed evidence that I freely and willingly satisfied my desire for a sip of water.
show me evidence to suggest otherwise.
because I wanted to, and I can.Dark Matter said:Or else why would you drink it?
benzyme said:If I made the active decision to go beat off, I don't necessarily need to, I just decided to, freely and willingfully. where's your example of how I needed to?
Dark Matter said:benzyme said:If I made the active decision to go beat off, I don't necessarily need to, I just decided to, freely and willingfully. where's your example of how I needed to?
You really believe that every decision is made on the surface of the conscious mind? You don't believe in the idea of subconscious, that there is choices that we make without knowing why (on the surface)?
You make the decision to go beat off because you have a need. Wich is to release stress, to enjoy pleasure, because it's a habbit also maybe. Or maybe because you are bored. All those things may lead to a desire to go beat off. There is your need, your cause/consquence.
benzyme said:because I wanted to, and I can.Dark Matter said:Or else why would you drink it?
benzyme said:Dark Matter said:benzyme said:If I made the active decision to go beat off, I don't necessarily need to, I just decided to, freely and willingfully. where's your example of how I needed to?
You really believe that every decision is made on the surface of the conscious mind? You don't believe in the idea of subconscious, that there is choices that we make without knowing why (on the surface)?
You make the decision to go beat off because you have a need. Wich is to release stress, to enjoy pleasure, because it's a habbit also maybe. Or maybe because you are bored. All those things may lead to a desire to go beat off. There is your need, your cause/consquence.
again, this comes down to psychobabble (psychology); where's your evidence to support
your claim?
benzyme said:the reason was the one I stated...because I wanted to.
to an outside observer, it could be for any reason; but I knew I wanted water, so I drank some.
semantics aside you can overanalyze the crap out of any given situation, but it doesn't take away
from the occurance that some things are done freely and willingfully.
Dark Matter said:benzyme said:Dark Matter said:benzyme said:If I made the active decision to go beat off, I don't necessarily need to, I just decided to, freely and willingfully. where's your example of how I needed to?
You really believe that every decision is made on the surface of the conscious mind? You don't believe in the idea of subconscious, that there is choices that we make without knowing why (on the surface)?
You make the decision to go beat off because you have a need. Wich is to release stress, to enjoy pleasure, because it's a habbit also maybe. Or maybe because you are bored. All those things may lead to a desire to go beat off. There is your need, your cause/consquence.
again, this comes down to psychobabble (psychology); where's your evidence to support
your claim?
So you want me to go and structure a whole experiment just for your own pleasure?
Pretty much everything is psychology is based on the principle that behaviors have causes. If you consider psychology to be bullshit, then I don't see why I'd continue with this conversation.
Dark Matter said:benzyme said:the reason was the one I stated...because I wanted to.
to an outside observer, it could be for any reason; but I knew I wanted water, so I drank some.
semantics aside you can overanalyze the crap out of any given situation, but it doesn't take away
from the occurance that some things are done freely and willingfully.
And where is YOUR evidence? You keep asking me for one, as if my logic wasn't complete. Where is yours? Prove me that your choice was made freely and not the consquence of previous events? You know that "because I know" isn't a solid argument, right?
benzyme said:because it is someone else making a determination of someone else's experience, from a second-person point of view. there are too many ambiguities, and we could endlessly have circular arguments.
a group that is similar to the experimental group and is expose to the same experiential environment but is NOT exposed to the independent variable; the group is used for comparison