Author Topic: Searching for GOD...  (Read 3863000 times)

torridon

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37300 on: November 05, 2019, 12:50:46 PM »
But it is not about penguins or rabbits.  It is about you and your own ability to be consciously aware of meaning.  An ability which defies any physical explanation, because material elements are incapable of forming a single entity of conscious awareness as outlined in my previous posts.

Well penguins and rabbits are relevant if your rationale arbitrarily excludes them.  You need to grow your understanding to include all of life, not just humans, and then see how humans fit into the bigger picture.

Alan Burns

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37301 on: November 05, 2019, 03:17:04 PM »
Well penguins and rabbits are relevant if your rationale arbitrarily excludes them.  You need to grow your understanding to include all of life, not just humans, and then see how humans fit into the bigger picture.
My rational does not specifically exclude them.  If you can find a rabbit or penguin capable of expressing rational thoughts I would have to conclude that they have been gifted with the similar spiritual gifts to those of human beings.
The truth will set you free  - John 8:32
Truth is not an abstraction, but a person - Edith Stein
Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
Joy is the Gigantic Secret of Christians - GK Chesterton

Roses

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37302 on: November 05, 2019, 03:28:16 PM »
My rational does not specifically exclude them.  If you can find a rabbit or penguin capable of expressing rational thoughts I would have to conclude that they have been gifted with the similar spiritual gifts to those of human beings.

For which you have no verifiable evidence, just something you are desperate to believe is true.
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torridon

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37303 on: November 05, 2019, 03:48:43 PM »
My rational does not specifically exclude them.  If you can find a rabbit or penguin capable of expressing rational thoughts I would have to conclude that they have been gifted with the similar spiritual gifts to those of human beings.

Moving the goal posts again.  Having rational thoughts is not the definition of conscious perception, and if you'd bothered to read the links I've provided you would know that already.  We can't know in detail what the thoughts are like that go on in the mind of a penguin; however that it is capable of conscious perception is beyond doubt - a parent's ability to recognise its young is a good example of what is meant by conscious perception.  Consider that penguins are birds not mammals and the last common ancestor between humans and birds was around 300 million years ago, that should give an insight into how deeply fundamental and widespread this brain function is; no way is it just something that evolved in humans in very recent evolutionary time.  So once and for all, let's have no more of this 'impossible to derive conscious awareness from particles' nonsense.  It happens, somehow, and it is ubiquitous in Nature.

ekim

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37304 on: November 05, 2019, 03:51:40 PM »
My rational does not specifically exclude them. have been gifted with the similar spiritual gifts to those of human beings.
... or maybe Bluehillside could come up with an example of a human who is incapable of expressing rational thoughts and therefore like the rabbit possesses no spiritual gifts.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37305 on: November 05, 2019, 05:07:29 PM »
ekim,

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... or maybe Bluehillside could come up with an example of a human who is incapable of expressing rational thoughts and therefore like the rabbit possesses no spiritual gifts.

So far as I can tell, no humans possess “spiritual gifts” as that’s just something people like AB make up as an emotional comfort blanket.
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Roses

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37306 on: November 05, 2019, 05:09:03 PM »
ekim,

So far as I can tell, no humans possess “spiritual gifts” as that’s just something people like AB make up as an emotional comfort blanket.

I agree.
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ippy

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37307 on: November 05, 2019, 05:58:41 PM »
ekim,

So far as I can tell, no humans possess “spiritual gifts” as that’s just something people like AB make up as an emotional comfort blanket.

Well yes that's the way the lack of evidence is pointing.

Regards, ippy.

Alan Burns

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37308 on: November 08, 2019, 10:11:49 AM »
Enki, apologies for this late reply - and thanks for your detailed feedback.
Alan,

Whether it was consciously driven or not is open to question, but there is plenty of evidence that the unconscious also plays a major part, if not a dominant part, in producing our thoughts and decisions. I have never had any quarrel with our freedom to think and act as we do, unless we are curtailed by outside influences of course.
But the materialist view would mean choices were entirely predetermined before we became consciously aware of them.  There can be no half measures.  We are entirely driven by past physically predetermined reactions - or there is something else involved - but not random.  Conscious choices are not random.
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You often try this tack of appealing to our judgement in being able to see something like you that you think is impossible or absurd. Usually, as in this case, your appeal most definitely fails because you give no reason to think something is wrong or absurd.
My reasoning is entirely based upon the reality of my demonstrable ability to drive my own thought processes.
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I think that it is eminently sensible to think that our thoughts and actions are not uncontrollable because, unless the brain is damaged, there is no reason to think that they are not entirely under the control of our brains.
But if a brain comprises nothing but material elements, the only form of control will be physically controlled reactions within the material.  So everything will be inevitable, uncontrollable reactions to previous events. This is not control - just uncontrollable reaction.
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I can quite accept that it is entirely possible that the natural physical reactions and interactions within our brains can produce our thoughts and actions. There is a wealth of evidence which suggests this, not least that when our brain ceases to function, then thoughts and actions also cease.
But I suspect the wealth of evidence you consider is entirely based upon material science investigation.  If you deliberately exclude any possible source outside material science, you will inevitabley conclude that everything must somehow be derived from pre defined material reactions, even if you can't discover how it works.  When the physical brain ceases to function it is inevitable that any interactivity with a human soul would no longer be possible, so consciously controlled actions will cease - but what happens to our conscious awareness can't be predicted.
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As determinism seems to be the overriding physical norm, I see no reason to think that our thoughts and actions aren't a product of this process also. I would not use the word 'predeterminism' because it suggests that all events are determined in advance, and can insinuate some sort of entity(god/fate etc.) which 'knows' or even 'decides' these events.
Determinism is certainly the norm.  As explained above, physical determinism will be entirely defined by the laws of physics acting within material reactions.  But our conscious freedom to drive our own thought processes does not fit with this type of determinism.  So you are faced with the possibility that our conscious freedom is just an illusion, or there is something else which determines our thought processes which is not predetermined, but consciously invoked.  It is human will.
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I was simply suggesting that it might be possible that the innermost working of the brain might use quantum indeterminacy before it decoheres to classical physics. Penrose and Hameroff suggested that microtubules are able to behave as quantum objects. A later suggestion was that ion channels in neuronal cell membranes are a possible site for quantum phenomena(Al-Khalili and McFadden)  Even if either of these hypotheses were true, then it still says nothing about your third way at all.
But quantum indeterminacy implies that there is no perceived cause to quantum events.  It does not preclude the possibility that quantum indeterminacy has no cause - just no discernable cause.  It opens the door to the possibility of non physical causes, such as a spiritually invoked cause.
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Firstly you presume there is a human soul. I don't because firstly there is no evidence that it exists and secondly I see no reason for it to exist. Then you tell me that you 'do not presume' to know how this soul works.  I asked you a question, Alan, which was "How does it(the soul) come to its conclusions if they are neither deterministic nor random?". What's your answer? "I do not presume to know how the human soul works." In other words you are totally unable to answer the question I asked, you are totally unable to challenge the logic of determined/random and, furthermore, it's based upon an idea(the human soul) that you are totally unable to evidence. And you expect me to take your word for it, Alan? You'll have to do better than that. I need reasoned argument and evidence, both of which seem to be sadly lacking in your case.
The evidence for the human soul lies in our own conscious awareness and in our ability to make consciously driven choices - both of which defy any explanation from physically predefined material reactions.  Coming to any conclusion requires the ability to consciously contemplate the relevant factors.  Such freedom to contemplate cannot exist within physically predefined chains of cause and effect in an entirely material brain.  Conclusions cannot be determined by uncontrollable reactions.
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Anyone can 'witness' whatever they wish, Alan. To call something a reality simply means that it is you that consider it a reality, and it is not necessarily the 'reality' that someone else experiences. To get anywhere near an objective reality requires intersubjective evidence, rational thought and logic. I 'witness' to my contention that you seem to be sadly lacking in all these departments.
Yes, we do have the freedom to witness - but what drives this act?
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There is a huge amount of evidence that cognitive functions are the result of electric activity within the brain. There are many ideas of what consciousness is. One such hypothesis that it is the result of EM fields within the brain. I see no reason to think that brain activity(and hence the mind) is not a result of cause and effect(I would not use 'predetermined' for the reasons given above), of reaction and interaction, of the physical/natural world. I completely reject your last sentence therefore. It's no good simply making assertions like that without backing them up with reasoned argument. Why can't material reactions not lead to thoughts and actions? What evidence have you that supports your assertion.
Electrical activity certainly plays a part in the brain's cognitive functionality, as do electromagnetic fields, but can you honestly presume that they play the whole part?  If they do play the whole part then the inevitable conclusion must be that everything we do, think or say is entirely predetermined by underlying physically controlled reactions - which denies us the consciously driven freedom we all enjoy.
The evidence for my conscious freedom lies in my ability to make the consciously driven assertions I am perceived to make.
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Finally, Alan, I began this because you always seem to evade answering the question I(and many others) originally asked. You always ignore, rather than face up to the logic. Why even today, Outrider asked you a similar question in post 36478:

We are not entirely controlled by outside influences is your position - fine.  Our current mental state is the product of prior learning and experience - an outside influence.  If we remove that from the equation, and the current direct influences (sensory information, hormonal state etc.) - what's left?  What's the other bit.
This presents a fascinating thought experiment, to try to imagine one'self when cut off from the information contained in our brain.  But:
I am aware of past memories.
But these memories are not me.
I am aware of all my learnt experiences.
But these learnings are not me.
I am aware of sight, sound, touch and taste.
But there senses are not me.
Take all these away, and what is left?
Me.
I remain a single entity of awareness and willpower.
When my material body ceases to function, I will look forward to being aware of a place in a new world which God has prepared for me.
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And, if it's not determined by prior events, how does it come about? Is it random?
No.  I am not determined by prior events - I (my soul) am God's creation.
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This was an attempt to pin you down. The nearest I came is your admission that you really haven't a clue how this soul of yours works, but you still cling on like a leech to your idea that there must be a soul nevertheless because you, Alan, cannot possibly conceive of the idea that our thoughts and actions are the result of natural processes. Obviously you are welcome to your point of view, but to an outsider like me it simply smells of bias and bad science inculcated by your religious commitment. I don't find you at all convincing.
Yet I have had the freedom to consciously contemplate the points you have made and make these sincerely thought out replies.  I am not at all convinced that I could have acomplished this by nothing but physically predetermined material reactions in my brain.
« Last Edit: November 08, 2019, 10:28:25 AM by Alan Burns »
The truth will set you free  - John 8:32
Truth is not an abstraction, but a person - Edith Stein
Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
Joy is the Gigantic Secret of Christians - GK Chesterton

Stranger

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37309 on: November 08, 2019, 10:32:16 AM »
There can be no half measures.  We are entirely driven by past physically predetermined reactions - or there is something else involved - but not random.  Conscious choices are not random.

Why can't you honestly face the arguments? It is a misrepresentation to introduce "physical" into the logical argument and then you've just totally ignored the actual logic and made the same old, self-contradictory assertion.

Look, either everything that led up to make a choice fully determined it or not. If not, then some part of that choice was not due to anything that led up to it, and was therefore random.

You can't just assert yourself out of that logic.

My reasoning is entirely based upon the reality of my demonstrable ability to drive my own thought processes.

Your self-contradictory view is not demonstrable, so your "reasoning" is based on nothing.

This presents a fascinating thought experiment, to try to imagine one'self when cut off from the information contained in our brain.  But:
I am aware of past memories.
But these memories are not me.
I am aware of all my learnt experiences.
But these learnings are not me.
I am aware of sight, sound, touch and taste.
But there senses are not me.
Take all these away, and what is left?
Me.
I remain a single entity of awareness and willpower.

Which simply leaves all the relevant questions unanswered (as usual). What made you the person you are? How do you make choices? If you take away all your life of experience, all your initial state (genetics, and whatever state you think a soul had when it popped into existence), what other ingredient is there left when forming the will to do something? And "present state of conscious awareness" is still a meaningless avoidance of the question.
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Outrider

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37310 on: November 08, 2019, 10:50:57 AM »
But the materialist view would mean choices were entirely predetermined before we became consciously aware of them.  There can be no half measures.  We are entirely driven by past physically predetermined reactions - or there is something else involved - but not random.

If that's where the evidence leads, that's the conclusion.  To start an argument with 'but, if this is the case then...' sound awfully like your argument is derived from the fact that you don't like the implication of the conclusion, not because you think any of the elements leading to it are incorrect.

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Conscious choices are not random.

Then they are, by definition, dependent upon something, right?

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My reasoning is entirely based upon the reality of my demonstrable ability to drive my own thought processes.

And there's your first misstep - it's not a demonstrable ability at all, in fact the evidence points to exactly the opposite.  Even if it were somehow true, though, that part of you that's 'driving' - how is it making its decisions on where to drive?  They're not random, you assured us, so they're dependent upon the prior events as well - you can make it spiritual rather than mechanistic, despite the absence of evidence, but you aren't escaping causal mechanisms.  If it's not random, it's driven by something - what's that something, and in what way is it free of what's come before?

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But if a brain comprises nothing but material elements, the only form of control will be physically controlled reactions within the material.  So everything will be inevitable, uncontrollable reactions to previous events. This is not control - just uncontrollable reaction.

Again, this is sounding an awful lot like argumentum ad consequentiam.

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But I suspect the wealth of evidence you consider is entirely based upon material science investigation.  If you deliberately exclude any possible source outside material science, you will inevitabley conclude that everything must somehow be derived from pre defined material reactions, even if you can't discover how it works.

It isn't inevitably down to science; however, until and unless you can bring something to the table that's at all reliable and validatable, it's what we have that actually works.

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When the physical brain ceases to function it is inevitable that any interactivity with a human soul would no longer be possible, so consciously controlled actions will cease - but what happens to our conscious awareness can't be predicted.

It can be, indeed it is; our conscious awareness stops.  So far, there's no reliable evidence to suggest that prediction is wrong, and so it continues to be the provisional understanding of conventional science.  There are ways it could be changed; we might, in the future, upload a consciousness to an artificial 'brain' for instance.  If you want to posit a 'soul' though, you need to show how it interacts with the brain; you need to show something happening in thought which isn't a consequence of the known physical laws, in order to justify adding an otherwise unevidenced element to the mix.

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Determinism is certainly the norm.

Without determinism you can't know anything.  If effect is independent of cause there is no consistency, not prediction, no reliability, no confirmation of prediction.  More significantly, perhaps, without determinism there is no evolution - successful traits cannot be passed down if they are not reliably successful.

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As explained above, physical determinism will be entirely defined by the laws of physics acting within material reactions.

Only by convention, not by dictate.  If you can show non-material effects reliably, they'd be added to the sum of human knowledge.

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But our conscious freedom to drive our own thought processes does not fit with this type of determinism.

I'd agree, but not for the reasons you're citing - it's 'special' - but rather because you can't demonstrate that it's actually real.

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So you are faced with the possibility that our conscious freedom is just an illusion, or there is something else which determines our thought processes which is not predetermined, but consciously invoked.

Those appear to be the possibilities. One of those has evidentiary support, one of them doesn't.

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It is human will.

Oh, well why didn't you say so.  Can you let me know when you're due to get your Nobel Prize for solving the problem of consciousness?  I presume, of course, that you're backing this up with something more than 'I really, really, really want it to be so'.

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But quantum indeterminacy implies that there is no perceived cause to quantum events.

On the contrary, the predictable distribution of quantum events in large numbers suggests that there are causitive mechanisms; it's impossible to define whether the individual indeterminacy of a given event is the product of a truly random element or a mechanistic event that we are currently unaware of.

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It does not preclude the possibility that quantum indeterminacy has no cause - just no discernable cause.

Precisely.

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It opens the door to the possibility of non physical causes, such as a spiritually invoked cause.

That door was never closed, it was just waiting for someone to turn a light on on the other side to give us reason to walk through it.  There are an infinite number of open doors, we can't walk through all of them.

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The evidence for the human soul lies in our own conscious awareness and in our ability to make consciously driven choices - both of which defy any explanation from physically predefined material reactions.

Wow - never has so much been wrong about so much in so little writing... There is no evidence for a human soul in conscious awareness, especially when the evidence shows that consciousness lags behind the neural activity that provides it.  Our choices are not consciously driven, they are subconsciously driven and consciously recognised after the fact.  Consciousness does not 'defy explanation from physically predefined material reactions' you just don't like the explanation - I'll freely admit its both highly provisional and not clearly understood, but it's not reliant on unevidenced elements.  Which is not to say, definitively, that a 'soul' isn't involved, just that you don't have sufficient basis to claim that it's a fact.

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Coming to any conclusion requires the ability to consciously contemplate the relevant factors.

No, it requires the application of logic in an algorithm - if that algorithm is deliberately formulated in a silicon-based processor in a computer we don't presume there's any sort of conscious contemplation involved, why would we presume so when a carbon-based experientially derived algorithm does the same?

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Such freedom to contemplate cannot exist within physically predefined chains of cause and effect in an entirely material brain.

Don't worry, it doesn't exist at all, you just think it does.

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Conclusions cannot be determined by uncontrollable reactions.

On the contrary, conclusions have to be determined by uncontrollable reactions - once it's in play, it takes on a life of its own.

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Yes, we do have the freedom to witness - but what drives this act?

What does that even mean? Witness what?

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Electrical activity certainly plays a part in the brain's cognitive functionality, as do electromagnetic fields, but can you honestly presume that they play the whole part?

Yes, we can presume, given that they are sufficient explanation for the observed phenomena.  If you want to suggest something else, you either need to demonstrate that the current explanation doesn't adequately explain the phenomena (demonstrate, not merely claim) or you need to demonstrate something else interfering with the operation.  You are doing neither of those things.

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If they do play the whole part then the inevitable conclusion mus be that everything we do, think or say is entirely predetermined by underlying physically controlled reactions - which denies us the consciously driven freedom we all enjoy.

Right.  And?

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The evidence for my conscious freedom lies in my ability to make the consciously driven assertions I am perceived to make.

Except that you could exactly as equally make those assertions in a deterministic system - the fact that you make them is evidence of brain activity, but says nothing about the sequence of that activity or the inputs into it.  Even your feeling of conscious control - which I don't doubt you believe you feel - is only evidence of consciousness, it doesn't actually demonstrate where in the sequence it occurs, and it certainly doesn't evidence any non-neural elements of the process.

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This presents a fascinating thought experiment, to try to imagine one'self when cut off from the information contained in our brain.  But:
I am aware of past memories.
But these memories are not me.
I am aware of all my learnt experiences.
But these learnings are not me.
I am aware of sight, sound, touch and taste.
But there senses are not me.
Take all these away, and what is left?
Me.

Brain injury victims who lose memories often undergo profound changes in personality - are they the same person? That's a difficult question to answer without a clear definition of what makes someone 'them' - what it doesn't do is suggest that the rest of the brain somehow requires something extra-physical to animate or agitate it.

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I remain a single entity of awareness and willpower.

And you still have a brain to provided that awareness - whether 'willpower' in the sense you mean is a thing, or merely a characteristic of the activity of that particular brain's algorithms is questionable.

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When my material body ceases to function, I will look forward to being aware of a place in a new world which God has prepared for me.

Perhaps.  Certainly whilst your material body functions you are looking forward to it; when it ceases to function, the evidence suggests there will be no pattern of activity to post-hoc rationalise as looking forward to anything.

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No.  I am not determined by prior events - I am God's creation.

Again, this is an assertion - you've not derived this from anything other than really, really wanting it be so, and an argument from incredulity regarding what complex processing systems might be capable of.

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Yet I have had the freedom to consciously contemplate the points you have made and make these sincerely thought out replies.  I am not at all convinced that I could have acomplished this by nothing but physically predetermined material reactions in my brain.

You feel like you have that freedom, but the evidence doesn't support your conclusion.

O.
Universes are forever, not just for creation...

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torridon

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37311 on: November 08, 2019, 04:44:12 PM »
But the materialist view would mean choices were entirely predetermined before we became consciously aware of them.  There can be no half measures. 

It's not 'predetermined', it's 'determined'.  And that conscious awareness is a construct of preconscious mind states is not a 'materialist' view, it is the logical conclusion from our understanding of brain function and is supported by empirical evidence.  It is not a 'materialist' view, rather it is the understanding that is true to the principles of evidence and reason.
« Last Edit: November 09, 2019, 08:10:40 AM by torridon »

torridon

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37312 on: November 09, 2019, 08:18:35 AM »

This presents a fascinating thought experiment, to try to imagine one'self when cut off from the information contained in our brain.  But:
I am aware of past memories.
But these memories are not me.
I am aware of all my learnt experiences.
But these learnings are not me.
I am aware of sight, sound, touch and taste.
But there senses are not me.
Take all these away, and what is left?
Me.
I remain a single entity of awareness and willpower.

If that were a true characterisation, then the same would also be true of every horse, cat and dog, since they also seem to have a singularity of awareness and volition. Any prey animal not aware of present dangers would soon be a dead prey animal. Any predator that did not want to eat would soon be a dead predator.

Awareness and volition are not human exclusives, they are ubiquitous in nature.  See the bigger picture and follow through.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37313 on: November 09, 2019, 09:08:49 AM »

The evidence for my conscious freedom lies in my ability to make the consciously driven assertions I am perceived to make.This presents a fascinating thought experiment, to try to imagine one'self when cut off from the information contained in our brain.  But:
I am aware of past memories.
But these memories are not me.
I am aware of all my learnt experiences.
But these learnings are not me.
I am aware of sight, sound, touch and taste.
But there senses are not me.
Take all these away, and what is left?
Me.
I remain a single entity of awareness and willpower.

I suspect only you would present a silly reductio ad absurdum and regard it as being profound - if you were indeed cut off from all the information in your brain, as you describe, then you wouldn't be aware of anything whatsoever, including your idea of 'me', since any awareness of anything involves brain activity, which rather kicks your thought experiment that 'me' is somehow independent of your biology into touch.

'You' are your brain, Alan, whether you like it or not.

ekim

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37314 on: November 09, 2019, 10:35:33 AM »

The evidence for my conscious freedom lies in my ability to make the consciously driven assertions I am perceived to make.This presents a fascinating thought experiment, to try to imagine one'self when cut off from the information contained in our brain.  But:
I am aware of past memories.
But these memories are not me.
I am aware of all my learnt experiences.
But these learnings are not me.
I am aware of sight, sound, touch and taste.
But there senses are not me.
Take all these away, and what is left?
Me.
I remain a single entity of awareness and willpower.
When my material body ceases to function, I will look forward to being aware of a place in a new world which God has prepared for me.No.  I am not determined by prior events

The problem with the conclusion you draw from your thought experiment is that you are not free from your imagination which is based upon memories and learning.  You imagine that you remain a single entity with its own willpower and that it will  in the future enter a new world.  All you have done is created a religious ego/self based upon religious scripture which you have become 'attached to' rather than become 'free from'.

SusanDoris

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37315 on: November 09, 2019, 02:49:22 PM »
I suspect only you would present a silly reductio ad absurdum and regard it as being profound - if you were indeed cut off from all the information in your brain, as you describe, then you wouldn't be aware of anything whatsoever, including your idea of 'me', since any awareness of anything involves brain activity, which rather kicks your thought experiment that 'me' is somehow independent of your biology into touch.

'You' are your brain, Alan, whether you like it or not.
If I were Alan, I'd put in for a replacement which works efficiently! - or perhaps rationally is a better word!
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ippy

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37316 on: November 09, 2019, 06:49:24 PM »
If I were Alan, I'd put in for a replacement which works efficiently! - or perhaps rationally is a better word!

I doubt if there's  much a chance of ever seeing a more extreme example demonstrated of the inescapable power or a more extreme example of how successful and mind numbing indoctrination can be with its ability to clamp down on some, otherwise apparently intelligent individuals, thought processes, in my opinion.

Commiserations Alan, ippy


Alan Burns

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37317 on: November 10, 2019, 10:20:33 AM »
If that were a true characterisation, then the same would also be true of every horse, cat and dog, since they also seem to have a singularity of awareness and volition. Any prey animal not aware of present dangers would soon be a dead prey animal. Any predator that did not want to eat would soon be a dead predator.

Awareness and volition are not human exclusives, they are ubiquitous in nature.  See the bigger picture and follow through.
Once more you seem to be confusing internal conscious awareness with observed instinctive reaction to sensory data.
The truth will set you free  - John 8:32
Truth is not an abstraction, but a person - Edith Stein
Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
Joy is the Gigantic Secret of Christians - GK Chesterton

ekim

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37318 on: November 10, 2019, 10:32:26 AM »
Once more you seem to be confusing internal conscious awareness with observed instinctive reaction to sensory data.
I think you are not being clear what you mean by 'conscious awareness'.  Do you believe that a monkey leaping through a tree is not aware of the branches it reaches for and that its actions are unconsciously performed and have no direction?

Alan Burns

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37319 on: November 10, 2019, 11:07:05 AM »
It is apparent that the atheist point of view can only be justified by reliance on human intellect, fickle though it is.  I have come across many Christians who will testify that their faith is based upon a personal, life changing encounter with God.  Such experience giving them faith that will endure for the rest of their lives.  Many atheists seem intent on finding ways to dismiss such personal witness stories by concluding that they are either lying or mentally deluded, regardless of the evidence presented.  In addition to personal witness stories of the modern day, we have many such witness stories of personal encounters with God throughout history.  The Christian bible is itself a collection of such witness stories, culminating in the New Testament containing the writings of at least seven people (Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Peter, Paul and James) giving their independent accounts of their personal encounters with Jesus Christ Himself.  One has to ask, can all these witness accounts be entirely dismissed as lies or mental delusions?
« Last Edit: November 10, 2019, 12:07:26 PM by Alan Burns »
The truth will set you free  - John 8:32
Truth is not an abstraction, but a person - Edith Stein
Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
Joy is the Gigantic Secret of Christians - GK Chesterton

Nearly Sane

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37320 on: November 10, 2019, 11:15:48 AM »
It is apparent that the atheist point of view can only be justified by reliance on human intellect, fickle though it is.  I have come across many Christians who will testify that their faith is based upon a personal, life changing encounter with God.  Such experience giving them faith that will endure for the rest of their lives.  Many atheists seem intent on finding ways to dismiss such personal witness stories by concluding that they are either lying or mentally deluded, regardless if the evidence presented.  In addition to personal witness stories of the modern day, we have many such witness stories of personal encounters with God throughout history.  The Christian bible is itself a collection of such witness stories, culminating in the New Testament containing the writings of at least six people giving their independent accounts of their personal encounters with Jesus Christ Himself.  One has to ask, can all these witness accounts be entirely dismissed as lies or mental delusions?
Apart from this being an attempt to shift the burden of proof, you have included a couple of begging the questions in assuming (a) that there is a god, and (b) that absent a methodology, personal internal untestable experience is evidence.

Walter

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37321 on: November 10, 2019, 12:25:37 PM »
It is apparent that the atheist point of view can only be justified by reliance on human intellect, fickle though it is.  I have come across many Christians who will testify that their faith is based upon a personal, life changing encounter with God.  Such experience giving them faith that will endure for the rest of their lives.  Many atheists seem intent on finding ways to dismiss such personal witness stories by concluding that they are either lying or mentally deluded, regardless of the evidence presented.  In addition to personal witness stories of the modern day, we have many such witness stories of personal encounters with God throughout history.  The Christian bible is itself a collection of such witness stories, culminating in the New Testament containing the writings of at least seven people (Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Peter, Paul and James) giving their independent accounts of their personal encounters with Jesus Christ Himself.  One has to ask, can all these witness accounts be entirely dismissed as lies or mental delusions?


Matthew Mark Luke John Peter Paul and James
Obviousely common names of the time 2000 years ago in the Middle East
So confirming the validity of evidence available .
Don't know why I didn't recognise it before ? 😳

Stranger

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37322 on: November 10, 2019, 12:52:05 PM »
It is apparent that the atheist point of view can only be justified by reliance on human intellect, fickle though it is.

Firstly, (as has been pointed out to you countless times and you just ignore) the atheist point of view does not need any justification, it's the many and varied claims about gods that need justification.

Secondly, you have spent a lot of this thread claiming that you are using reasoning and evidence to justify a soul and hence your god (although you've never actually managed it).

I have come across many Christians who will testify that their faith is based upon a personal, life changing encounter with God.

Yes - all the different and mutually exclusive versions of Christianity and many other religions too...

Such experience giving them faith that will endure for the rest of their lives.  Many atheists seem intent on finding ways to dismiss such personal witness stories by concluding that they are either lying or mentally deluded, regardless of the evidence presented.  In addition to personal witness stories of the modern day, we have many such witness stories of personal encounters with God throughout history.  The Christian bible is itself a collection of such witness stories, culminating in the New Testament containing the writings of at least seven people (Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Peter, Paul and James) giving their independent accounts of their personal encounters with Jesus Christ Himself.  One has to ask, can all these witness accounts be entirely dismissed as lies or mental delusions?

Apart from the basic unreliability of witnesses, we have the problem that the witnesses for all the various versions of god(s) do not even agree with each other.

If there is a god (or gods) it is making a right pig's ear of trying to communicate with us...
x(∅ ∈ x ∧ ∀y(yxy ∪ {y} ∈ x))

SusanDoris

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37323 on: November 10, 2019, 01:43:16 PM »
AB

The word you fail to be aware of is INTERPRETATION. People have all sorts of experiences and ALL those experiences which are claimed to include some God/god are incorrectly interpreted. There is still zero objective evidence, after all these thousands of years, for any God/god/supernatural being / etc/etc.
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ippy

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #37324 on: November 10, 2019, 02:28:56 PM »
AB

The word you fail to be aware of is INTERPRETATION. People have all sorts of experiences and ALL those experiences which are claimed to include some God/god are incorrectly interpreted. There is still zero objective evidence, after all these thousands of years, for any God/god/supernatural being / etc/etc.

Isn't there something or other about throwing seeds onto stony ground in a book somewhere?

Regards to you S D, ippy