Gabriella,
Your argument is wrong. I was discussing AB trying to distinguish between choices being "influenced" and "defined" not what made those choices.
No it isn’t and no you weren’t. What you actually did was to draw an equivalence between AB’s approach and the rationalist approach. I even copied and pasted for you where you did it (“
But it puts him in the position of not knowing the detail of how choices are made, same as the rest of us.”). If you actually want to talk about something else with him that’s up to you, but your actual attempt at equivalence still fails for the reasons I explained and you ignored.
You're wrong again. There is plenty to consider about how choices are made, hence the thread has run on for many pages with many interesting posts on how people think choices are made.
No, you are. What I actually said was:
“
Alan’s “soul” on the other hand is incoherent because it breaks the binary deterministic/random options. That is, it’s not that he’s wrong but that he’s not even wrong – there’s nothing to consider, just white noise.”
To which you replied:
“There is plenty to consider, hence the point of having a discussion that has run for pages.”Do you see it now? There may be plenty to consider about decision-making, but not about the “soul” we were actually discussing for the reason I explained. Whether one page of white noise or 1,000 pages of white noise makes no difference – it’s still white noise.
Oh look, you are still here, considering the arguments posted on this thread. As usual you make statements you can't back up. Feel free to start a thread on the concept of “&Y*T^&^T46tgyo3870t if you want to consider that and see how far you get. But my guess is you will still be here a few pages from now, contradicting your own statement that there is nothing worth considering.
Then, as ever, your guess would be wrong and (more relevantly) this analogy thing would still have you foxed. I wasn’t proposing ““&Y*T^&^T46tgyo3870t” as worthy of discussion at all but merely as analogous to AB’s “soul” inasmuch as it’s incoherent. People having religious arguments for example are sometimes described as analogous to two bald men arguing over a comb. Would you then reply, “Well, you’d better start a discussion about two bald men and a comb then” or would you grasp that the force of an analogy isn’t about its content at all?
You do this a lot I’ve noticed – when you get out of your depth you lash out, playground style. Once I would have responded in kind but it seems to me that this behaviour suggests someone more damaged than bad so I’m a lot more sympathetic. If you want to try to respond to the
actual points and without the dummy spitting go right ahead. I’m here for you.