Gabriella,
So you assert. I need evidence - e.g. if you tell me what theory effectively removes conscious choice we can look for posts where he has routinely dismissed it.
I’m pretty sure you’re trolling now. It was
AB who told us that he’d deny “any” theory that “effectively removes” etc. Which theories he thinks do that is something you’d have to take up with him. My point though (as I suspect you well know) is that he takes an
a priori position
regardless of what “any” theory does or in future could actually tell us.
You didn't correct me. This whole thing started in reply #31648 where you tried to compare the arguments in neuroscience about conscious vs unconscious choices to a jigsaw puzzle. You said "Even though a complete A-Z explanation of consciousness isn’t there we do at least have perhaps a coherent A-M explanation, whereas AB has only A – “it feels that way to me therefore that’s the complete explanation for it”.
To put it another way, which do you think to be the more likely to give you an accurate picture: a 100 piece jig-saw with half the pieces missing, or a 100 piece jig-saw with 99 of the pieces missing? I propose the former (while accepting that I could be wrong); AB asserts the latter (while denying any possibility of being wrong)."
And my response was along the lines that there wasn't enough information to make that claim. A jigsaw puzzle is a picture cut up into pieces. It doesn't need to be a picture of something anyone recognises, it could be abstract with random dots or shapes and the pieces, other than their shape need have no connection to the other pieces in terms of creating a recognisable picture. If you take a 100 or 1000 of those type of jigsaw puzzles you can't calculate a probability that 50% of the pieces will help you figure out what is on the other 50% or if there is a recognisable picture. You made an assumption that the jigsaw puzzle had a recognisable picture and I challenged that assumption.
If we are getting back to talking about the brain processes, which have very little to do with jigsaw puzzles, there is insufficient information - we don't understand a lot about what the brain interacts with and the process of how it makes choices relating to morals or related to decisions where the act or behaviour is perceived to have significant consequences. Neuroscientists and experimental psychologists working on studies about this are suggesting possible theories while stating there is a lot they don't know hence their theories about moral choices or decisions to act are tentative as they are based on brain activity they measured for simple actions such as lifting your finger.
Yes I did correct you. It’s simply axiomatic that probabilistically more information will give you a better shot at identifying new discoveries than will less information. Why? Because knowledge is by and large cumulative – it builds on bridgeheads of knowledge that are already established. This is true of jig-saw puzzles, scientific theories or any other application of discovery of fact.
You are being hypocritical - you criticised Alan for the same thing, even though so far all you have done is assert that he said anything about deepest truths or reality at the deepest level but have failed, despite me repeatedly asking, to come up with an example of Alan saying anything about deepest truths or realities.
Wrong again, for the reasons I’ve explained to you several times now and you keep misrepresenting. What do you get out of it?
Another vague assertion from you with no evidence. He has also said he doesn't know what the soul is or how it interacts with the brain or how it works and something along the lines of only God has this knowledge or he is telling you how it feels to him. You have repeatedly stated that AB's explanations only go as far as AB claiming "it is magic". Of course that may be your idea of someone stating they know deepest truths or reality - but it doesn't sound very deep to me.
Stop it now. He’s told us frequently that he knows certain things to be true
beyond any possibility of being wrong. Telling us that he “hasn’t quite worked out yet the details” about how a soul interacts with a brain for example doesn’t change that absolute certainty about the things he thinks he does know.
It would help if you could quote exactly what AB is claiming he "knows" and how that translates as claiming to know deepest truths or deepest realities. And more importantly if you can't present any evidence to back any claims you make about what Alan has said about deepest truths or reality, why should your claim be taken seriously just because you really, really, really believe it's what AB meant?
Stop trolling, It’s just dull.
Up to you if you want to keep trying, or give up - it's your time you're spending and AB is free to post his beliefs on this forum.
He is, albeit that they should in fact be in the faith sharing area as that’s all he has – faith.
A soul or a leprechaun can be discussed as concepts - people can describe what they think a soul is or what its attributes are and how it relates to the concepts of free will.
https://www.academia.edu/28486811/Five_Philosophers_Theories_on_Free_Will_Plato_Hobbes_Hume_Leibniz_and_Hegel
They could presumably do the same about leprechauns, if anyone has any thoughts on leprechauns and free will.
They could, but that’s not what AB does. Rather he claims “soul” etc
as objective facts about the world, and indeed that we all have one. That means he has to play by the rules of validating such claims, which is where he always falls apart like a cheap suit.