by jimwalton » Tue Sep 18, 2018 4:37 pm
> Reason is what we use to come to the same conclusion despite our different subjective minds....etc.
Yeah, I agree with a lot of this. We've already discussed it and agree somewhat. Obviously where I part from you is that I think there are many things we can decide about what makes sense to us. We weigh evidences, feelings, and intuitions. Right now the subject of Kavanaugh's fitness for the Supreme Court is one of those. We do get to decide what makes sense to us. We weigh whether it's politically-motivate slander, whether he should be held to task for a single event during his high school years (if it's even true), whether people are allowed to change, whether he is a good choice given his conservative leanings, whether we are being told the truth about his positions, and on and on. I think it's our reasoning process that begins to form in us what makes sense to us.
> You have no control over your volition, which again speaks for a deterministic brain
I think determinism is self-defeating. If you have decided to be a pure determinist, then you're not a pure determinist. If you're a pure determinist, then you do not believe it for rational reasons. You believe it because you were determined to believe it and you don't control what makes sense to you. It is impossible to believe in determinism for rational reasons. The only way you can believe in determinism for rational reasons is if determinism is false. If determinism is true, then it doesn't make any sense for you to say that determinism is true, because if it is true, then you are assuming there are rational reasons for believing it. Fine, believe it, but if you're right, then your position is no better than the opposite, rationally, because you believe people believe things aside from any rational basis.
If, as a determinist, you cannot distinguish between right and wrong on moral grounds, then you can't distinguish between true and false on rational grounds, and so you can't say determinism is true. Your conclusion that determinism is true is of the same worth that murder is wrong, because the same casual forces that generate in me the belief that murder is wrong generates in you the belief that determinism is true. One position is no stronger or weaker than the other. I could just as well claim that murder is right and determinism is false. That means I have no reason to believe that determinism is true. And if determinism is true, I can't believe it for rational reasons; I can only believe it because it is an effect working in me against which I have no control. In other words, if you're right, you're also wrong. It's not a tenable position.
> Language is just encoding, transmitting and decoding of information.
I think language is far more than this. We ascribe meaning, various meanings, depth of meaning, and even create meaning. We tie emotional and intuitional value to language. We speak of concretes and abstractions. I think language is far more than encoding, transmitting, and decoding. Not only do individual words have abstract meaning, but even the sequences and combinations of words can yield different and possibly even greater meanings. Math is a language, has no material source, and probes far deeper than the decoding of information. I just don't agree with you here. I'm not trying to be insulting (honestly), but my mind isn't so small as to think everything can be reduced to neuronal actions, chemical reactions, and decoding of information. I would say that being a Christian opens my mind to huge possibilities, limitless creativity, incredible depths of reason. To reduce it all to biology is, to me, impossible. Please don't take me as insulting you, because I'm not and I don't feel that way. I guess what I'm trying to say is that being a Christian has greatly enlarged my thinking space. I'm talking about myself and where I am, not about you and who you are.
> If you hear a word that you know you can't help but understand it, and if someone says a word in a completely foreign language it doesn't mean anything to you, and you can't decide to understand it. Or you could make a random, meaningless sound, and someone from a different country might be completely sure you just said something in their language. Again, it seems that a complicated, programmable network of neurons is all you need.
Yeah, I get what you're saying here, but it's so much more than that. When I see a Chinese character, I can't exactly sound it out. But when a Chinese speaker begins to try to explain, often the concept goes far beyond language as he tries to explain the nuances and cultural markers, etymology, and what the word truly means. Sometimes as a foreigner I can't even understand the full impact of the word because I have not been part of that culture. It's nowhere near just "decoding." That's my opinion, anyway.