spooky2
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Matthew, I must say I haven't found an argument against my opinion, that "free will" is nonsense. I try to clarify.
Quote: "A person's current state of being is the sum of their experiences and consequences of those (the karma they wrought). However, we do have free will, we are able to forgive others and ourselves (with effort, grace and practice - along with eating some humble pie), and thus we can make new decisions."
I agree in that we make new decisions, but these decisions are the result of our history, of what we've learnt/experienced. If our decisions were the result of a free will, this very free will would negate our ownership of this will, as it is the attribute "free" together with "will" which clearly indicates that this will is exactly NOT a result of our personal cause-and-effect history, and would be, as I said, an element of pure random within an orderly time chain of events, which would mean a break in our personality, because it would be a break in the order of time, as long as we define us as beings within time, beings which can change on an evolutionary basis (including of course an evolution of our mind). Now, someone could say that such a break can actually happen, and I admit that this might be true, but then we can't speak of a will anymore which is mine or yours, it is a will then which comes out of nothing, if it is free.
A word on quantum mechanics. It is indeed the case, that for instance the known double slit experiment shows results which are not only inexplainable by our normal vision of time and space, but even indicate that time and space don't exist as consistently as we (still) think they do. It is but quite ironic, that the quantum mechanics theory, as every scientific theory, is based on time and space (and with time, the order of events, causality, in a probabilistic interpretation), so when time, space, and causality is not anymore considered as valid, then the theory of quantum mechanics necessarily isn't valid anymore, too. The "unsharpness", the unpredictability in single events and the statistical predictability of the sum of a large amount of events nicely shows the bandwidth of randomness and order- statistical order. "Free will" has nothing to do with quantum mechanics, as long as "free will" means something different than randomness.
So let's forget "free will", as it is indeed nonsense. That's my only intent with these posts, to simply suggest not to make use of that phrase anymore as it is illogical and therefore isn't an argument, and isn't a reason, for or against anything.
Spooky
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