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02-04-2007, 09:06 PM | #101 (permalink) |
Freeskier
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Istanbul was Constantinople now it's Istanbul not Constantinople...
Posts: 1,536
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^you're the one who brought up interventions in the first place.....i don't know why you did, so i cant answer that question
and yes, you can have a choice between jail and rehab, if you quit the rehab early, you will go to jail.
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What you've done becomes the judge of what you're going to do -- especially in other people's minds. When you're traveling, you are what you are right there and then. People don't have your past to hold against you. No yesterdays on the road. William Least Heat Moon, Blue Highways Your toughest competitor lives in your head. Some days his name is fear, or pain, or gravity. Stomp his ass. HOOKED ON THE WHITE POWDER |
02-04-2007, 09:12 PM | #102 (permalink) | |
My home? Discabled,
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Quote:
Note: I'm with Kerkovian and Swim in that I don't believe in the possibility of free will (neither genetic nor deistically bestowed), but I was too lazy to say so earlier.
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Vita brevis, Occasio praeceps |
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02-04-2007, 09:20 PM | #103 (permalink) |
Freeskier
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Istanbul was Constantinople now it's Istanbul not Constantinople...
Posts: 1,536
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See, I think anyone who believs that everything in our lives is out of our control, that we are entirely subject to being pushed and pulled in directions according to what happens around us is just saying it as a cop-out to avoid taking responsibility in their life. It's quite convenient, if everything you do in your life is the consequence of an outside force, and you have no control of that action, then it'd be quite easy to go with the philosphy that you're not leading life, life is leading you, and just give up all responsibility for the way it turns out.
plus, I see all those factors that you gave Fal as an evidence of free will. A drug addict will evaluate those factors, which had been thee since the begining of his addiction, and at some point, make the choice to actually listen to them and go in another direction.
__________________
What you've done becomes the judge of what you're going to do -- especially in other people's minds. When you're traveling, you are what you are right there and then. People don't have your past to hold against you. No yesterdays on the road. William Least Heat Moon, Blue Highways Your toughest competitor lives in your head. Some days his name is fear, or pain, or gravity. Stomp his ass. HOOKED ON THE WHITE POWDER |
02-04-2007, 09:24 PM | #104 (permalink) |
Imperfectly Perfect
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 1,290
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Very few people actually think that way, and those who do, usually are mentally ill.
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"it is only through a limitless accumulation of the imperfect that a certain type of perfection can be attained" |
02-04-2007, 09:26 PM | #105 (permalink) |
My home? Discabled,
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Location: Bristol, UK
Posts: 204
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But if they still pay attention to those factors it's not free will. It's not a pure choice because factors bias it. In no way would I suggest that a lack of free will in any way justifies murder etc, nor that committers of offences should be let off easy as a result. It's an acceptance that a combination of situation and DNA are what affects my situation rather than clinging to some idea that we can always choose what to do. If a plane is going to crash into my house, I'm not going to go to the kitchen and have a biscuit just to prove that I have free will and can do what I wish (and even then it wouldn't be free will because I'd only be doing it to prove that we have free will; an attempt to vindicate my point and thus biasing the decision), likewise if I'm hungry I'm not going to throw myself under a car just to prove that I can.
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Vita brevis, Occasio praeceps |
02-04-2007, 09:43 PM | #106 (permalink) |
Imperfectly Perfect
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 1,290
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If a plane is going to crash into your house, pull a Donnie Darko, because then you get to be the first person to time travel, with the negative of you will die in how many days, hours, minutes, and seconds the crazed rabbit tells you.
Ignore that, i'm just being rambley and irrelevant
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"it is only through a limitless accumulation of the imperfect that a certain type of perfection can be attained" |
02-05-2007, 05:30 AM | #107 (permalink) | ||
They call me Tundra Boy
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: In your linen cupboard.
Posts: 1,166
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Quote:
Quote:
I agree that a lack of free will, as far as that means your individual thoughts and actions being essentially inevitable, doesn't release you from holding responsibility for your actions. Why would it? If somebody is a criminal due to their DNA and their life experiences... they are still a criminal.
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Last edited by DontRunMeOver; 02-05-2007 at 05:36 AM. |
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02-05-2007, 05:43 AM | #108 (permalink) |
They call me Tundra Boy
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: In your linen cupboard.
Posts: 1,166
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Thought I'd make a new post for this question.
Does anybody else, like I do, believe in fate/destiny, or whatever you want to call it? My opinion is that in any situation there can only ever be one possible outcome. We don't know what this outcome will be when we are performing the actions which lead us to the outcome, but when you look back on them you see that they were the only choices that ever would have been made and the current situation is the only one which could possibly exist.* This ties in strongly with the idea of free will, so it seems suitable to open it up on this thread. Anybody else agree? Who disagrees? *To that extent, although I loved Back to the Future, I think the whole time-travel idea is complete bullshit (as opposed to most other science fiction, which is just shit). Unless you count travelling forwards in time at the rate of one second per second, which I do all the time. |
02-05-2007, 10:03 AM | #109 (permalink) | |
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Quote:
However I do not believe in fate or destiny. We do what we do not out of freewill, but neither would I argue that there's some overriding, supernatural power deciding our actions.
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Vita brevis, Occasio praeceps |
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02-05-2007, 10:48 AM | #110 (permalink) | |
They call me Tundra Boy
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: In your linen cupboard.
Posts: 1,166
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Quote:
What I mean by destiny is not that you can go to a fortune teller, have a vision or even intelligently guess where you where you will be in 20 years time. What I mean is that in 20 years time, you will be in a certain place, doing something with your life (or not) and that will be the only place and the only thing you could have been doing at that point in time. When you look forward in time it looks like there are many options and paths you could take, which result in different outcomes. When you look backwards in time, there is only one route you took, there was only one path and the idea that you could have ended up somewhere else, doing something else is a fallacy. At the same time, the idea that people can know anybody is "destined" to do something, before they have done it, is bull****. After they have done it, well... then they were destined to do it.
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Last edited by DontRunMeOver; 02-05-2007 at 10:53 AM. |
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