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I'm puzzled by Christians like Alan B., as they don't seem to talk about intelligent gravity. But why not, if you are talking about mutations being caused by God, as otherwise too complex to explain naturalistically. So is that saying that gravity is not complex, and is not caused by God? Or gravity is complex, and is still not caused by God?
Quote from: wigginhall on September 16, 2015, 04:17:39 PMI'm puzzled by Christians like Alan B., as they don't seem to talk about intelligent gravity. But why not, if you are talking about mutations being caused by God, as otherwise too complex to explain naturalistically. So is that saying that gravity is not complex, and is not caused by God? Or gravity is complex, and is still not caused by God?Gravity is simply one of the laws of nature brought into being by God. I believe that intelligent intervention occurs in our universe by the power of free will (God's or man's) interacting with the natural laws of nature, not by overriding them.
Quote from: Alan Burns on September 16, 2015, 04:43:41 PMQuote from: wigginhall on September 16, 2015, 04:17:39 PMI'm puzzled by Christians like Alan B., as they don't seem to talk about intelligent gravity. But why not, if you are talking about mutations being caused by God, as otherwise too complex to explain naturalistically. So is that saying that gravity is not complex, and is not caused by God? Or gravity is complex, and is still not caused by God?Gravity is simply one of the laws of nature brought into being by God. I believe that intelligent intervention occurs in our universe by the power of free will (God's or man's) interacting with the natural laws of nature, not by overriding them.So no miracles then.
Quote from: Andy on September 16, 2015, 04:51:33 PMQuote from: Alan Burns on September 16, 2015, 04:43:41 PMQuote from: wigginhall on September 16, 2015, 04:17:39 PMI'm puzzled by Christians like Alan B., as they don't seem to talk about intelligent gravity. But why not, if you are talking about mutations being caused by God, as otherwise too complex to explain naturalistically. So is that saying that gravity is not complex, and is not caused by God? Or gravity is complex, and is still not caused by God?Gravity is simply one of the laws of nature brought into being by God. I believe that intelligent intervention occurs in our universe by the power of free will (God's or man's) interacting with the natural laws of nature, not by overriding them.So no miracles then.Every act of free will is a miracle because there is no natural explanation for the cause of a free will event.
Quote from: Alan Burns on September 17, 2015, 07:16:49 AMQuote from: Andy on September 16, 2015, 04:51:33 PMQuote from: Alan Burns on September 16, 2015, 04:43:41 PMQuote from: wigginhall on September 16, 2015, 04:17:39 PMI'm puzzled by Christians like Alan B., as they don't seem to talk about intelligent gravity. But why not, if you are talking about mutations being caused by God, as otherwise too complex to explain naturalistically. So is that saying that gravity is not complex, and is not caused by God? Or gravity is complex, and is still not caused by God?Gravity is simply one of the laws of nature brought into being by God. I believe that intelligent intervention occurs in our universe by the power of free will (God's or man's) interacting with the natural laws of nature, not by overriding them.So no miracles then.Every act of free will is a miracle because there is no natural explanation for the cause of a free will event.which means the holocaust is a miracle in your world.
My concept of free will is that it is neither deterministic nor random.
By definition, a free will event has to be invoked by a source which is outside the 'cause and effect' chain of events, otherwise it would not be free will.
Also, it is certainly not random, otherwise formula 1 racing drivers would soon deminish after deciding when to overtake.
To fit in with my most basic concept of reality, free will must be invoked by the awareness of the human soul. Somewhere in our brain there is an interface between our spiritual self and our physical body in order for self awareness to interact with the physical world.
Gravity is simply one of the laws of nature brought into being by God. I believe that intelligent intervention occurs in our universe by the power of free will (God's or man's) interacting with the natural laws of nature, not by overriding them.
AB,QuoteGravity is simply one of the laws of nature brought into being by God. I believe that intelligent intervention occurs in our universe by the power of free will (God's or man's) interacting with the natural laws of nature, not by overriding them.Just out of interest, assume for now that we merely have the impression of free will but in fact the decisions we appear to make are just the outcomes of unfathomably long chains of cause and effect - ie, pretty much the consensus of those who actually study and think about the subject. No invisible little man at the controls, no "souls", no "miracles" and none of the panoply of other agencies you have to come up with and retrofit to the observable facts to arrive at your version of events.How then would the world appear to be different from the one you actually observe?
The Holocaust was a miracle was it? Oh for pity's sake Alan, enter the real world for a change, you seem to be on a different planet to the rest of us.
To me, the very act of observing breaks the chain of cause and effect, because observing does not comprise simply of a deterministic reaction. It involves conscious perception which attaches meaning to our sensory inputs, rather than mere reaction. If cause and effect ruled, I would just react to the pixel patterns in my eyes rather than perceive meaning from them.
Well, I am repeating what Andy said, but you seem to be saying that simple things are 'brought into being by God', but complex things are too complex to have occurred naturally, so they are also because of divine intervention. So the whole ID argument about complexity seems to have collapsed, since whether something is simple or complex, you can 'simply' (!) produce one of your empty slogans, 'brought into being by God'. Why bother with all the arguments about complexity then?
Hi Wiggs,QuoteWell, I am repeating what Andy said, but you seem to be saying that simple things are 'brought into being by God', but complex things are too complex to have occurred naturally, so they are also because of divine intervention. So the whole ID argument about complexity seems to have collapsed, since whether something is simple or complex, you can 'simply' (!) produce one of your empty slogans, 'brought into being by God'. Why bother with all the arguments about complexity then? I think it goes something like this: "gravity and other universal laws don't look to hard to me and besides they affect rocks and mouses and daffodils as well as people, so I reckon they must have been popped into existence by a god who left them to run on their own. On the other hand, consciousness and free will look really, really complicated and it stretches my personal incredulity too far to think that they're just emergent properties of the stuff of which I'm made, so I'll give them a special status of something that happens when this god feels like joining in for a bit". Something like that anyway. How AB would ever propose to distinguish between the appearance of his version of free will and the appearance of free will that requires none of the menagerie of supervening entities he piles on top of it is anyone's guess, but clearly the story makes sense to him in some way.
AB,QuoteTo me, the very act of observing breaks the chain of cause and effect, because observing does not comprise simply of a deterministic reaction. It involves conscious perception which attaches meaning to our sensory inputs, rather than mere reaction. If cause and effect ruled, I would just react to the pixel patterns in my eyes rather than perceive meaning from them.Thats a non sequitur, but the question rather was this: if you merely had the impression of free will as you think it to be (because that's the way it feels to you) but instead consciousness and meaning was just an emergent property of the stuff of which you're made, how would you ever know the difference?
I can't bring myself to imagine something which I know does not exist.
It is only nonsensical when you try to analyse it from a materialistic point of view. My free will is self evident from my most basic concept of reality. My self awareness (which can't be defined in material terms) is what drives my free will. If free will did not exist, there would be no need for self awareness - we could just exist as the survival machines produced from the natural selection process. Self awareness and free will are inextricably linked and they are the most compelling evidence we have for the existence of the human soul.
Quote from: Alan Burns on September 17, 2015, 10:28:21 AMTo me, the very act of observing breaks the chain of cause and effect, because observing does not comprise simply of a deterministic reaction. It involves conscious perception which attaches meaning to our sensory inputs, rather than mere reaction. If cause and effect ruled, I would just react to the pixel patterns in my eyes rather than perceive meaning from them.Why? In what way is it demonstrated that 'conscious perception' is not deterministic?
Quote from: Alan Burns on September 17, 2015, 03:31:19 PMQuote from: Outrider on September 17, 2015, 10:40:21 AMQuote from: Alan Burns on September 17, 2015, 10:28:21 AMTo me, the very act of observing breaks the chain of cause and effect, because observing does not comprise simply of a deterministic reaction. It involves conscious perception which attaches meaning to our sensory inputs, rather than mere reaction. If cause and effect ruled, I would just react to the pixel patterns in my eyes rather than perceive meaning from them.Why? In what way is it demonstrated that 'conscious perception' is not deterministic?The deterministic aproach to conscious perception fails when it comes to apply meaning to what is perceived. Our sensory organs send messages to lots of brain cells which then demonstrate some form of chemical activity, but then what? Everything in this scenario is just individual sub atomic particles reacting to their immediate neighbours. If we were just biological robots, the chemical activity in the brain cells would then lead to reactions in the form of body movements, but at no stage in the process would "meaning" be perceived. Everything would be generated by cause and effect.That is what you want to believe, but I don't think that is a fact!
Quote from: Outrider on September 17, 2015, 10:40:21 AMQuote from: Alan Burns on September 17, 2015, 10:28:21 AMTo me, the very act of observing breaks the chain of cause and effect, because observing does not comprise simply of a deterministic reaction. It involves conscious perception which attaches meaning to our sensory inputs, rather than mere reaction. If cause and effect ruled, I would just react to the pixel patterns in my eyes rather than perceive meaning from them.Why? In what way is it demonstrated that 'conscious perception' is not deterministic?The deterministic aproach to conscious perception fails when it comes to apply meaning to what is perceived. Our sensory organs send messages to lots of brain cells which then demonstrate some form of chemical activity, but then what? Everything in this scenario is just individual sub atomic particles reacting to their immediate neighbours. If we were just biological robots, the chemical activity in the brain cells would then lead to reactions in the form of body movements, but at no stage in the process would "meaning" be perceived. Everything would be generated by cause and effect.
I can't bring myself to imagine something which I know does not exist. There is no way I can imagine myself to be the product of a collection of atomic (or sub atomic) particles. The only thing which makes any sense is that I perceive and control certain parts of my body, and I exist as a single entity of perception and control.