Gabriella,
Nope. You got something wrong, I explained why it was wrong, now you’re shifting ground. AB was talking about something he calls “soul”, and I explained that any role it might play in “choices”, “defined” or anything else is off the table a priori until he (or you) find some was of dragging it back from incoherence. Deal with it or not – I really don’t care either way – but have the decency to stop pretending it was about something else so as to get off the hook.
Nope. You got it wrong - I'm not shifting ground - you misunderstood what I said. My line before the one you quoted was about the distinction between being influenced and being determined. Deal with it or not – I really don’t care either way – but have the decency to stop pretending it was about something else so as to get off the hook.
Yes you have. Not for one moment did I suggest that AB’s idea “soul” offered anything worthy of consideration, and nor could it axiomatically until and unless it was no longer incoherent.
If you want to have discussions about the nature of “free” will that have nothing to do with conjectures about “soul” that’s fine, but it’s a different matter. Again, actually address that or not as you wish, but ineligibility of the conjecture "soul" to that is still the point I was actually discussing.
I was having a discussion about free-will when you jumped in. Feel free to join in about how we don't know if free-will exists or not and if someone wants to postulate a ghost in the system, how there is no evidence for it. Whether it is called a ghost in the system or a soul is irrelevant to the discussion about how choices are made.
No they’re not. What they (and I) are actually doing is explaining to him that the free will bit is a second order matter because his notion “soul” hasn’t even got its epistemic trousers off yet.
Nope. He came up with a soul to explain his notion of free-will. Free-will was the main thrust of the discussion apart from the bits where AB tried to convince posters that he knows the existence of God. Read #276 on page 8 where AB first mentions free-will. Everyone discusses that for some time and AB doesn't get onto the subject of a soul until #976 when he says in response to Shaker's post that AB's arrangement of genetic material makes AB human
"My God given soul makes me human. It gives me perception of my brain activity and enables me to acts of free will. Yes you can label this as assertion, but I am certain that you will eventually discover that it is an assertion of the truth." When he was asked how this “soul” would have anything to do with exercising will (free or otherwise) he readily tells us that he has no idea. It’s just magic apparently.
Yes I agree that he says he doesn't know. In #1025 Torridon asks for a meaning of soul. Ekim also asks the same question in #1028. AB provides a dictionary definition and then doesn't elaborate on souls again until he says in #1085
"The point I was making about predictable behaviour is that it is an indication that the animal may not have free will, and all behaviour is generated by physical reactions. If animal behaviour is predictable, it does not need a soul to explain its behaviour. So we know the goose reacts on a predictable way which does not require a soul." And then the discussion moved back to free-will. When I jumped in a t #26933 about what AB was actually claiming I said
"If i’ve understood him correctly, he believes that electrochemical activity taking place in his mind - producing his thoughts - are influenced by some other unseen part of him related to something spiritual or supernatural he calls his soul."Torridon says in #26952
"Your free will is not a reality it is an assertion. The logic that Stranger and others offer demonstrates that your assertions about it are wrong. The deterministic framework of understanding makes complete sense, yours is nonsense."And the discussion continues about free-will, with Alan asserting it exists because he feels it and other people arguing that feelings are not evidence for free-will.
I’m suggesting that posters here are deeply frustrated by AB’s refusal or inability ever to engage head on with the arguments that undo him. That they keep trying to break down his obduracy nonetheless is testament to their patience I think.
That's a sweeping generalisation, Some posters might be frustrated. Some posters might find the discussions it throws up interesting.
Very funny. If anyone can find a logical path from what I actually said (“I don’t “portray” myself as any such thing – what I actually do is portray logic as epistemically superior to bad arguments and assertions of faith”) to your response to it I’ll give them a whole English pound.
#27054 you said to me
"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." I originally assumed that you were trying to portray yourself as being superior by not being bad or not being damaged and offering your sympathy. But when you clarified that you don't think of yourself as superior, I assumed that meant that you thought yourself as more damaged than bad, similar to other posters you label more damaged than bad but were still offering your sympathy to me. You also have my sympathy.
By the way Susan - did you notice any hint of disdain or patronisation in BHS's post #27054? You did say in #27071 that you only had admiration for the rational posts which do not disdain or patronise and I am concerned that BHS might feel hurt that you did not have admiration for his post. Or alternatively, like me, he might not give a toss.