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If we have no free will, we can never know it, because we were destined from all eternity to believe what we believe, and logic has nothing to do with it. "Some ideas are so stupid that only intellectuals believe them.” George Orwell. "We know our wills are free, and there's an end on't." Samuel Johnson
Over this Easter season I have become more aware than ever of my deepening relationship with God. Words of scripture take on more profound meanings. Twice during the past week I have come across these words from John 14:27 - " … a peace that the world cannot give". No matter what troubles and strife this world brings me to endure, the peace and joy which comes from knowing God's love is always present. A peace that the world cannot give. A peace which I am certain cannot come from physically predetermined activity in my material brain.So I pray that this peace will be found by many more people.
We know that there is nothing called true randomness. Why do you keep insisting on these 'random' influences? How do you even know that they are truly random? 'Randomness of the gaps' is a real thing, quite clearly!
We don't know that at all. True randomness is something we cannot rule and we cannot rule in. We have to live with it as a possibility, but we can never prove it.
Well..fine. Similarly then, we can never rule out intelligent intervention nor rule in. It is a possibility that we can never prove or disprove. If someone can keep saying 'random...random' for every unknown thing, someone else can equally say 'God...God' for every unknown thing!
The holy spirit can be some use. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-48431612
Possibly Vic Reeves driving?
Who?
Quite the contrary. We know free will does not exist. Either your will is determined - if you roll back time to just before you make a decision and then when you roll it forward, you always make the same decision - or there is some element of randomness. In neither case, can you say there is free will.
This is a dreadfully naïve view which consciously chooses to categorise all human mental processes to be mechanistic reactions - thus deliberately ignoring any possibility for the spiritual nature of human awareness to invoke consciously driven choices.
AB,It doesn't "ignore the possibility" at all - what it actually does is to identify that the term "spiritual" is incoherent, and that the arguments attempted for it are hopeless. Finally address these problems and then perhaps you'll have something to say that's worth listening to. Why not for example begin by explaining how, if an event is neither determined nor random, it does in fact occur?
you appear to consciously choose to ignore the difference between "determined" and "predetermined". Just as you fail to differentiate between "choice" and "reaction".
AB,Have you really not learned by now that the way things appear and the way they are do not necessarily tally? Really though?So anyway, if neither determined nor random how would you propose that events occur?
Vic Reeves is a vastly overrated 'comedian' who presented, with his co-star Bob Mortimer, a uniquely unmemorable and unfunny show called Shooting Stars. In it, a large animated prop called "The Dove From Above" would be summoned down by the presenters and various guest celebrities. Fortunately, there is little else I remember about the show apart from this and Matt Lucas* in a romper suit.Shooting Stars (TV series) - Wikipediahttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_Stars_(TV_series)
Shooting Stars was brilliant, but you needed the right kind of sense of humour.
Some events are predictable reactions to previous events. (predetermined)Some events may be determined from sources which are not entirely predictable, and certainly not random.
That makes no sense. An event which is not predictable, in principal, is random by definition. This is just plain, undeniable, logic.
Nonsense. I can't predict who'll be the next tory leader, but it won't be random.