No Gordon, I am no longer terrified of cause and effect.
I have seen the light!
Cause and effect - great!
I can no longer feel guilt because I know could not have possibly chosen differently.
I can no longer be held to account!
I am free to do whatever I want!
Whoop Whoop Whoop !!!
just a minute though - there is something not quite right there ....
I have not read the last few pages as I'm sure it's just a repetition of the arguments we have heard before.
Just checking the argument has not changed and AB is still asserting that the capacity for abstract thoughts about the supernatural and morality and the capacity to make choices that took into account concepts about moral values was due to humans having a soul, rather than just that their brain had developed to be able to conceptualise abstract ideas.
And AB is asserting that animals don't have abstract thoughts about supernatural entities or morality because they don't have souls?
And we still haven't got any further in terms of AB defining a soul or providing any proof of a soul being present in humans, other than as an abstract concept in the mind, or a soul being the source of higher cognitive functions? I find AB's argument similar to certain transgender arguments that a biological man can have an innate female essence that makes him a woman because there is more than biology at play. The proof that he is a woman is the feeling that he is one and he cannot deny the reality of his feelings.
AB - in relation to being held accountable - if a choice is made based on the influences of nature/ nurture and given that nurture includes environmental factors such as listening to sermons about Jesus and reading the Bible and praying, if the nurture causes a change in perception, and this change is a factor in choosing a behaviour, why would we not be held accountable for that action?
What's the alternative to holding people accountable for their nature / nurture if a society is to function?