Instigator / Pro
18
1527
rating
8
debates
87.5%
won
Topic
#5507

Free Will is an Illusion

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
6
6
Better sources
6
4
Better legibility
3
3
Better conduct
3
2

After 3 votes and with 3 points ahead, the winner is...

baggins
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Rated
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
20,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Minimal rating
None
Contender / Con
15
1484
rating
8
debates
31.25%
won
Description

“Free Will”
- refers to the ability of individuals to make choices that are not determined by prior causes or external forces

“Illusion”
- a false idea or belief

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@LogicalDebater01

“my intelligence is immeasurable; my intelligence is within the ranges that are limited to being measured by scientific means ” pahahahhahahahah 🤣🤣

Buddy after that I’m not reading anything you say lol good luck in life 🤣

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@baggins

Also, In the abstract sense, Determinism shouldn't be the only quantity that is involved in having free will to be, or that free will is caused by. It includes both determinism and indeterminism to conclude free will or to have it functioning or existing, but not as an illusion. (It would illogical to conclude that it is either based on determinism or indeterminism) Again, Determinism being there does not restrict Free will to exist.

Furthermore,
"Pro’s entire argument is a mix of logical fallacies: a combination of presupposing determinism without establishing determinism as a fact, confirmation bias, and attempts to “define” free will out of existence." (said Con)
My interpretation and opinion based on reason: True, it contains logical fallacies, though not all of them are logical fallacies, but sure there are way too many logical fallacies in Pro's argument when dealing with the proving of Free will as an illusion.

No need to explain how, its' clear.

Furthermore,
"The attempt to define Free Will out of existence is naïve at best, understanding wholes in terms of their parts is what science does, but that certainly does not mean the wholes disappear. Pro is working with a definition of free will as requiring an immaterial soul and consequently focuses on providing evidence that our minds are physical, which is not in dispute. This argument is logically equivalent to arguing that since organic chemistry has determined that that living organisms are made up of non-living material, that life doesn’t exist, or inferring that because the colour green has been explained by science as merely a particular wavelength of light within the visible spectrum of the electromagnetic field, so therefore the colour green is an illusion. These are not valid arguments."
My interpretation and opinion based on Reason: Yes, that is what Pro's arguments somewhat mostly look like. Bro is confusing "mind" for "brain". (Again no need to explain if someone reads what Pro has actually said in response to proving that free will is an illusion, when clearly that is extremely absurd)

And so on...
"Pro’s argument is self-refuting, if as Pro asserts, our beliefs, and reasoning processes are determined, our responses are predetermined, and consequently, Pro’s conclusion undermines the very reasoning process he is using to justify it. A predetermined event is neither “true” nor “false” because for a person to know something to be true, it is necessary that they are free to choose to accept it as true. Justification requires some degree of cognitive freedom, some ability to have control over your deliberation, over what you do or do not accept based on evidence, but determinism makes the requisite freedom impossible. Pro’s is attempting to put forth a convincing argument while asserting that it is impossible to be convinced and maintaining that his conclusion cannot be rationally held." (said Con)

- My interpretation and opinion based on Reason: This is the exact problem here with Pro, Pro's base is targeted on "Determinism" and that it is somewhat looking like the only element in shaping "free will", which is not valid nor logical as I've mentioned within my explanations here. However, Con doesn't seem like that he's only basing Free Will on Determinism, nor is he basing it on Indeterminism. However, Pro repetitively assumes absurd ideas about Con's situation here when he's not exactly making Pro held up as an object of Ridicule, but actually he points out how Pro ineffectively "explains" the concept of "free will" being "deterministic" therefore "an illusion because it's presupposed and was always bound to happen" then kicks in ridiculously quantum mechanics of time and how it is planned out to be as they think it is planned out to be. However, this is not clear and it is sounding absolutely absurd so he holds a logical point in assuming that you're attempting to put forth a convincing argument while asserting that it is impossible to be convinced and maintaining that your own conclusion cannot be rationally held or be subject to criticism as if you hold the whole mighty brain power of the universe in your own thick skull that can barely understand the exchange of information that Con's giving throughout his arguments.

I believe, I've explained enough and furthermore explanation should be clear to how Pro's arguments are observationally nonsensical, it is too absurd to even be called sophistry because of how many illogical points their arguments have had. Perhaps it was convincing enough for those who had agreed with him and voted for him, but the sophistry lies within the situation of those who have been fooled by the points he hath made.

So far, Con's arguments on how subjective Free will is and how it revolves around experiential reality is pretty much valid, it seems reasonable and logical from how he's arguing it, though it may take more time for others to understand.

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@baggins

Con says
"The existence of free will is the self-evident default state, Pro wants to deny the experiential reality of every waking moment and challenge the validity of every moral and legal system found in every known time and place where humans have ever existed, by no more than arbitrarily proclaiming our experiential reality to be an illusion while presupposing the failed doctrine of determinism. The denial of the self-evident truth of free will is an extraordinary claim, such a claim requires an extraordinary argument backed up by extraordinary evidence."
My interpretation and opinion based on reason: Alright here he's showing his beef with determinism, but most importantly, since you seemingly "want to deny the moral and legal system found in every known time and place where humans have ever existed, by no more than arbitrarily proclaiming our experiential reality to be an illusion", I think I agree on this matter because you don't seem to understand ethics and morality in general, morality and ethics are generally derivations of different human natures(considering that morality is different for everyone despite the agreement from multiple human natures), these are simply planned out by the senses, or are simply having "sensory receptors" that help plan out morality (where sensory receptors have also aided in the development of ethics) (where it is interconnected with the senses), morality is simply logical to use when also distributing the questionable rationality of your status here because of how denying free will plays part within moral and legal systems (that are simply agreed on being valid by many). The senses also relate to "experiential reality" where "experiential reality" is "the things we know from direct experience"; that includes the senses (sensory receptors). Sure free will relates to the brain, however, free will does not derive from the brain only, nor the peripheral nervous system. Any abilities are circumstantially dependant, including the ability for an individual to make their own choices.

Over there, con claims that free will is always a fundamental and significant part of our experiential reality, since experiential reality includes the senses, and the senses are interconnected within the formation of free will (based on any choice or recognition we make that is upbringing from our free will), so it is logical to conclude that free will is a part of our experiential reality, however I am sceptical of it being a significant part of our experiential reality, since the significant part would simply be "experience" alongside "knowledge"; the senses of "experience" having to have undergone events through their own sense-related experiences as in the overall practical contact of someone with events. So on, he seems to make more sense on this part, but I disagree on the part he mentioned that free will is always a significant part of our experiential reality (because it is seemingly irrelevant within what "experiential reality" is, that is as if I was to be using semantics, though, in actuality the senses are mainly the core of experiential reality, or the very beginning of it). The interconnectedness of senses within Free will shouldn't be concluded as the basis of free will, since free will is the ability to make choices, not the interconnectedness (also semantics). In example, Experiential reality is demonstrated in this scenario:
Person A and Person B tries out a dessert called "Crème Caramel"
Person A: This dessert tastes like "AXVD"!
Person B: This dessert tastes like "BXADI"!

Where Person A recalls a food that he experientially thinks is tasting like a food called "AXVD" that he had from within his own experience (or is the closest to tasting like "AXVD" in his own experience)
Where Person B recalls a food that he experientially thinks is tasting like a food called "BXADI" that he had from within his own experience (or is the closest to tasting like "BXADI" in his own experience)
Both of them have a common reaction to it in that scenario, though they both experience something relatively similar and/or in relation to the concepts in experientialism, presuming that Con here used Experientialism in his own arguments (he seems to be a fan of Subjectivism, but I agree with Subjectivism to some extent), in this case however, Con used the subjective materials very efficiently in order to deal with the arguments as handed, that is by packing more logic when refuting Pro's arguments, whereas Pro's arguments where less efficient in disproving Con's arguments because they had less packing of logic.

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@baggins

Let's observe Con's arguments for the sake of your understanding:
Round 2, con says
"The strongest argument for the existence of free will is that we all observe it during every conscious moment, it is always a fundamental and significant part of our experiential reality, hence it is self-evident"
My interpretation and opinion based on reason: Sure, I can agree with the idea that free will is self-evident to us in general due to the observation that we make day-to-day in our own life such as watching a baby willingly grab a bottle of milk that their mother had willingly given under their own actions as supported by their own choice as well as free will. To imply that there is no free will or choice (or the ability of choice) involved and that they play no part is simply foolishness and absurdness and simply a denial of the current situation.

then Con says
" To deny Free Will by designating our experience of reality an illusion is necessarily a rejection of the very concept of empirical evidence, this eliminates induction as valid, which is the foundational basis of science and scientific knowledge, leaving us with nothing but detached abstractions that have nothing whatsoever to do with the real world."
My interpretation and opinion based on reason: "To deny free will by designating our experience of reality" is "necessarily a rejection of the very concept of empirical evidence"
And is this true? Let's observe.
Empirical evidence is "the information obtained through observation and documentation of certain behavior and patterns or through an experiment."
We have many experiments within the scientific studies, and Sidewalker claims that if we deny free will by designating our experience of reality an illusion then it is necessarily a rejection of the very concept of empirical evidence, but is this true? Well, philosophically his claim is similarly in truth with some aspects of the philosophy of free will. Scientifically it is unclear, however his points are more logically valid throughout his arguments when compared to Pro's arguments that are seemingly foolish and long for unnecessary flawed reasons.

Neither side possesses an accurate explanation for proving that free will is scientifically an illusion or that it is an illusion, but Con here argues the opposite but he also packs more logical sense.
Furthermore,

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@baggins

(In the most respectable sense)

You fucking pajeet. Did everything I write slide across your mind that fast and you instantly submitted yourself to the idea of "randomness" when i mentioned that there is indeterminism involved in Quantum Decoherence? Where did I even conform to the idea of "Randomness" in my argument? Free will is not established by randomness, randomness is only part of the big picture. The interplay is very complex, but it surely does involve randomness and randomness is also very relevant when discussing free will on that scale of information (which is quantum), because it deals with quantum mechanics and the atomic mechanism of "quantum decoherence". Randomness is relevant to Quantum Decoherence, what is irrelevant is your argument for proving that free will is an illusion.

Colloquially, a person averagely gets recommendation from doctors sayings, this averagely occurs in our day to day life whenever someone visits a doctor. Here's a fucking common scenario:

Doctor: "Sir, these are the medications on the paper that I told you to get from the pharmacy that is located within this hospital. Make sure you don't mix them up."
Patient: "Okay doctor. I go take this paper that you wrote the medications on to the nearby pharmacy that is located within this hospital."
Patient: "Sir, do you have these medications? I need you to give them to me because my doctor said to get them."
Pharmacist: "Okay sure, here are the medications."

Clearly the pharmacist does not give a shit to the argument from authority made there, the truth is, doctors possess authority over these contexts and they are allowed to gain any advantage over these matters because they have the materials to do so. However this scenario is still an argument from authority.

Also, My IQ is not of the low IQ population because my intelligence is immeasurable; my intelligence is within the ranges that are limited to being measured by scientific means because there are no psychometric tools to measure intelligence in those such ranges that are of the "extrapolated"(even if there is, it would be either experimental or inaccurately measuring it), therefore it becomes pseudoscientific to measure my intelligence.

However, for Sidewalker's situation, his observations seem clear and understands that there is something about the randomness that connects to the ideal concept of "free will", that there has to be something organizing it's operation. I don't think he agreed to the idea that randomness is what causes free will. You're simply having a big buttfuck of misunderstanding his arguments.

Understand that he granted you many chances within the arguments as well, yet you failed to prove anything, I believe your arguments are very childish and mediocre. What's more funny is that you don't realize this and how you don't seem to see how all of this randomness and information about quantum decoherence relates to the outcome of "free will" in the real world (within the abstract sense). These are purely abstract information about the world, it's no more than that unless if a proportion is being excluded or considered as an outlier.

I am also going to ignore your stupid semantics that you make "free will is not this but is that", continuously whatever term you use of "is" is simply subject to criticism while being based on your denial of existence seemingly illustrating your insanity of the situation.

What was brought up by you actually seems to support Con's arguments more, so thank you for that (I am also aiming for con here, because he makes the most logical sense, and your logic is purely flawed).

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@LogicalDebater01

Listening to doctors is not appealing to authority in the same way because the doctors don’t say “thats the right thing to do because I SAY IT”. They actually have reasons for why they recommend the things they do etc and they can show them. They study medicine thats based on scientific researches and experiments. You don’t even know what an argument from authority is so go back to your North Korean pre-school. And if you listen to your doctor just because he is a doctor without asking for any explanations you’re part of the low IQ population that you’re referring to.

Somehow I knew also that you would say something stupid again like “oh btw i didn’t mention Issac I said some other smart guy that is even smarter” missing the whole point again.

You failed to provide this smart guy’s reasons that might have been reasonable but you didn’t show them. You just provided him as evidence.. “hey look at this super duper smart guy, we dont have to know why he believes what he believes we just have to know he is super duper smart”.
An argument from authority.. A doctor would actually tell you why you need to take the pills he tells you to, he will provide you his reason and show you your blood work or whatever it is that made him think you should do something. AND HE CAN STILL BE WRONG BECAUSE HE IS JUST A HUMAN LIKE EVERYONE ELSE

You obviously didn’t get quantum de coherence since mostly everything you said was brought up by me to help me… yes quantum decoherence shows that the classical cause and effect nature of reality on macro level CAN appear from the micro level indeterminacy which only HELPS MY POINT. It shows also that just because there are some things in the universe that are not deterministic and are random that doesn’t defeat my point. Because all i need is determinism on a macro level and more precisely in the brain. And I did agree that they are still things that can get affected by the quantum indeterminacy but we also have no control of them which wont bring you to free will. Radioactive decay might be random but it is totally irrelevant to this debate. It’s just another thing you have no control of and you have to deal with if it happens.

And just like Sidewalker you think just because there’s some randomness and you would have to make choices and decisions thats free will. Whenever that randomness happens and you are presented with a choice, you having to make that choice is still not free will. Your brain still has to make that choice based on the information it has gathered in the past and the current condition and state of your body. Free will is not simply making choices, its the ability to make choices independently from your physiological past which you had no control of. So again, show me a neuron system that made a choice independently from the sum of its biological past? Show me the vigorous logic that Sidewalker used to defend “free will” being self evident?

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@baggins

What's irrelevant is your argument for proving that free will is an illusion. (it's like pretty shit for trying to prove free will is an illusion, hence irrelevant)

Surprisingly, Sidewalker understand the deep-root connections between determinism and indeterminism in relation to "free will". He seems very well-interpreted.

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@baggins

What's funny is that most of the norms in this population, the very low IQ or average IQ people misunderstand the concept of "Argument from Authority" on a very great scale of stupidity.

If you told someone that doctors tell us to stay healthy because they know what's good for you, you would understand that doctors are the ones who tell you that staying healthy is good just because they know so. It's incredibly funny how many people agree with this concept, even though it seems like an argument from authority if one observes so, it is an argument of authority that is widely accepted by many people who can't even understand combinatorial mathematics; many people whom are very foolish and stupid.

I believe that the concept of "Appeal to Authority" is widely misunderstood as well as the way of how one perceives an argument of authority to be. it would be very surprising if I told you the person in my argument as mentioned should've been "Fengzhi Wu" not Isaac Newton because Isaac Newton can never catch up to Fenghzi wu's level on any universe (he's an idiot compared to him), But what's surprising is that, the way I used that was not an Argument from Authority fallacy, because the topic is intrinsically in relation to the person as mentioned.

If you thoroughly understand the context behind Fengzhi Wu and The belief of a creator/God, then you would understand how they intertwine and relate to each other within the given arguments I have given.

More over, I believe you have a misunderstanding of Con's argument. You might think that he was the one who mentioned Determinism but if you observe his arguments, you could then clearly see that sidewalker was indicating that you were the one who was bringing up the concept of "determinism" (within an if statement) as you had mentioned "Quantum decoherence". Not to dwell into this debate too much, but Quantum decoherence is not all deterministic, the surface level of quantum decoherence shows the classical behaviour or mechanical behaviour by the most means, but not all means. Quantum decoherence still involves the remnants of non-deterministic comportments; as caused by the interplays between the universe and the entity of the universe that underlies within, as well as out-within, in collaboration to the outer of within.

Analogously, it is like the idea that you still have the ability to make choices... even under situations that are not under your control but rather above, just like how Quantum decoherence shows that even under the nature of where indeterministic (indeterministic behaviour in this case is in place of situations not under your control but rather above; showing that the transition from quantum behaviour shifts or rather moves into classical behaviour, where quantum behaviour is within the nature of indeterministic behaviour (showing that the place where the situation is not under control (implying that there is randomness therefore there is no "control" in the sense we observe from classical behaviour)) and that classical behaviour is within the nature of deterministic behaviour.

What's ridiculous is me explaining this to you when obviously determinism also relates to free will, how can you make free will without having the choice to do it? Wouldn't the choice imply determinism itself? Are choices not deterministic or rather a base that hath become deterministic due to the choice that one has made in a situation? Clearly, choices involve determinism; This however does not mean that the determinism restricts the individuals free will to make the choices.

Move your hand and you are acting with determinism conclusively assisted by indeterminism, as these quantities still relate to each other in a more generic viewpoint.

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@LogicalDebater01

And just so i dont make the same appeal to authority as you, my arguments are relevant not because they come from R. Sapolsky or Sam Harris for example but because Im literally discussing the brain and the physical processes that are happening in it. There’s no way you can say neuroscience is irrelevant.

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@LogicalDebater01

Let me summarize the debate for you since you’re having trouble:

“Free will” - make choices that are not determined by prior causes or external forces

PRO: here’s how the brain and our decision making works, here’s what causes the brain to work like that, here’s everything prior to that thats outside of our control. Show me one brain activity thats not determined from prior causes. Show me one decision that you make without the brain. CON: *ITS SELF EVIDENT* …Case closed.
(Scientific sources provided for my scientific claims. Philosophy not needed.)

Every argument of mine comes from neuroscientists and physicists from interviews and debates >ON THIS EXACT TOPIC<. To say that my arguments are not even relevant is simply idiotic.

Quantum mechanics was mentioned as a side note just because I knew CON would start talking about universal determinism (and he did) which is philosophical idea and not relevant. CON did not address Max T. until the final round.

CON: “my best argument for free will is “its self evident””
It is not. That was rebutted and he never answered it.

“Self-evident truths are typically axiomatic statements that are universally acknowledged (like "all bachelors are unmarried men"), which is not the case for free will.”

CON: “but, but, but our moral legal system”…
Answered by me and dropped by CON.

CONs arguments are based on intuition, false logic (shown many time in the debate) and keep asserting that everyone experiences free will. So, LOGICALdebater01 show me one argument where CON displayed ”vigorous logic”.

Btw, Im not surprised that you two think alike since Ive had a conversation about the same thing with both of you and you both said the same stupid thing.

-Why is the belief in god reasonable?
Logicaldebater and Sidewalker: Well bc Issac Newton was reasonable and he thought it is, therefore belief in God is reasonable…

Also, for #40, take the part where I wrote "I believe that Pro has been doing not so much so far, except explain basic baby concepts from physics, biology, and psychology in a very short and simplistic " as a great sarcastic joke, just in case if anyone doesn't notice, it's the complete opposite of that.

I understand the struggle Con had when debating Pro, it honestly seems like a pollution to any man with greater common sense.

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@Americandebater24

First of all, you are American and I don't think you understand much stuff correctly or in a logical way. I did not write that "listing sources should be considered UNREADABLE", I wrote "UNRELIABLE" at that last part. Please learn how to read and if you have cognitive issues with lacking the brain power to read, then I recommend going to a psychiatrist for finding solutions on how to solve your lack of brain power.

The essence of how debates function is how convincing arguments are, and if you disagree with this then you pretty much lack the ability to understand it's purpose. I believe Con is a very intelligent individual that most people can not understand; he seems apparent and quite gifted in my observation; his reasoning throughout his debates are very well conducted and packs more logic than the reasoning done by Pro throughout their rounds. Your inability to comprehend Con shows your lack of brain power, and you don't seem to understand the points illustrated in Con's viewpoint. Also it's probably just you who hardly comprehends Con.

I believe that Pro has been doing not so much so far, except explain basic baby concepts from physics, biology, and psychology in a very short and simplistic but very non-smart way due to how he uses those information in order to gain advantage in the debate (which is obviously a delusion of his). He spends so much time yapping in order to add details but not add any good reason to his arguments so far. Your inability to see how they've went ("strayed" is not a word I used nor would use for this situation) off topic is quite ridiculous.

Also, Pro's citations to support his arguments are quite absurd and ridiculous, because they're not enough to provide a sustainable argument that is logically sounding in order to prove that free will is an illusion, all he did was just cite less-abstract studies that require more investigation and are still being debated within the realms of philosophy. Pro went off topic because illustratively he has 80% of information that is useless for proving that free will is an illusion in his arguments (arguments of which are absurd).

I would like you not to tell me your desires and falsely put me in the accusation of "misrepresentation" of the debate, because I've already seen it all and I cringed very much observing Pro's arguments.

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@LogicalDebater01

I disagree with the way you managed your vote. It was evident that Con did not present a superior argument since it lacked any support. The statement that "listing sources should be considered unreadable" is illogical. An argument becomes stronger with more evidence provided. That's the essence of how debates function. Moreover, I cannot comprehend how Con demonstrated better conduct than Pro.

Your assertion that Pro "intensely yaps about quantum mechanics and the elementary principles of neuroscience, including the functioning of decaying brain cells (a hyperbolic statement, and such yapping is indeed irrelevant and unnecessary for the debate topic)," while Con remains professionally on topic, is incorrect. In the initial round, Pro presented the argument that free will is an illusion, citing cognitive neuroscience studies that demonstrate how our decisions are influenced by unconscious processes. Therefore, it appears you may have either not read the debate thoroughly or are misrepresenting the facts.

You also assert that Con "counters Pro's assertions with robust logic in a detailed and logical manner; very efficiently." However, this is inaccurate as neither Pro nor Con strayed off topic, and regardless of how "logical" you subjectively consider Con's argument to be, Con failed to provide any evidence, even upon Pro's request.

Therefore, I would like you to correct your vote, or I shall report it for misrepresentation.

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@LogicalDebater01

;( :(

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@baggins

Why is 80% of your arguments a mnemonic device for recalling the ABC's of the bottom echelon general knowledge of the intellectual primary grounds (For undergraduates)?

To be honest, most of what you've mentioned in your arguments are taught in middle school in North Korean schools, or other more traditional-like Chinese school

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@baggins

I would call most of your arguments a bunch of yappery; they don't seem like convincing nor reasonable arguments (more specifically, they don't seem like logical arguments).

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@baggins

Problem?

“I recommend everyone to focus on the arguments that each individual has made” (he said without analyzing a single argument lol)

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@whiteflame
@Sidewalker

Another coherent vote that analyzed the arguments thoroughly…

“First round, Pro yaps intensely”
?
“Con however opposes Pro's yapping with vigorous logic”
?
“Con probably mogs Pro in terms of reasoning.”
?
Why do most people here think voting is just to say your opinion lol…

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@LogicalDebater01

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

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@Sidewalker
@baggins
@SocraticGregarian96

**************************************************
>Reported Vote: SocraticGregarian96 // Mod action: Removed
>Voting Policy: info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy
>Points Awarded: 7 to con
>Reason for Decision: If you believe in God, then it’s obvious free will exists. (if not, he would he intervene)

>Reason for Mod Action:

The voter does not explain any of their point allocations. There is no given reason for awarding sources, conduct or S&G. While the sentence provided might be read as a reason for awarding arguments, it does not in any way serve as an evaluation of the arguments presented by either side, and instead appears to only contain the voter's thoughts on the topic. That is not sufficient to award arguments, nor is it sufficient to award any of the other points given.
**************************************************

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@Barney
@whiteflame
@baggins
@Casey_Risk

I don't know how to report it, let me know if there anything I need to do.

I copied everybody, that usually works.

White Flame and Barney, there's no way SocraticGregorian96 even read the debate, it's a BS vote.

I expect all of you to read it first....and THEN give me all the votes :)

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@baggins

I already reported the vote. You can, too. If it doesn't get removed in a few days, feel free to message Whiteflame or Barney and they'll be able to remove it for you.

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@Sidewalker
@Casey_Risk

Yeah I think he just saw the title and decided to give his opinion or to troll a lil bit.

The funny thing is there’s people who believe in God and don’t believe in Free Will (like Lutherans...) lol.

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@baggins

No way SocraticGregorian96 even read the debate., that's a BS vote.

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@SocraticGregarian96

That's one of the most obvious vote bombs I've ever seen. You do realize you actually have to comment on the content of the debate, right? I have no idea why or even if you actually think Con is the winner.

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@gfzdvdfg

I’ve heard of things like that but I’m not sure what exactly you’re referring to. Can you be more specific?

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@Casey_Risk

Thanks Casey!

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@3RU7AL

I also never claimed a lot of other things that CON thought I did but it’s okay lol

Напишите в поиске интернета есть центр который проникает в мозг человека через высокие технологи и пердаите всем. через выскоие технологий где бы они не

Seems like an interesting debate. I'm about to get my voting qualification. I'll vote on this one over the weekend.

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@baggins

"And the answer is because of the biology over which you had no control,
interacting with the environment over which you had no control, stretching from one second ago
to the moment you were an fertilized egg. And when you look at how that stuff works,
there's not a crack anywhere in there in which you can insert sort of the everyday intuitive notion of free will."

and if you inject any random noise into the process (indeterminism)

the effects of that random noise

cannot be credited to your personal "moral intuition" because they are random (quantum or whatever you want to call it)

by definition

not an "act of will"

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@Sidewalker

Premise 1: Free Will is not compatible with Determinism

Premise 2: Free Will is not compatible with NON-determinism

Premise 3: Free Will is not compatible with indeterminism

Conclusion: Therefore, Free Will is simply an emotion, it's an inner sense of "autonomy" you feel when you don't realize how you are being coerced

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@Sidewalker

"Tell them human effort doesn’t matter,"

NOBODY EVER CLAIMED THAT

the only claim here is that human action is -not- UNMOTIVATED

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@3RU7AL

Oh okay my bad, maybe I misunderstood you. So we are saying the same thing! :)

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@baggins

i'm not suggesting you change the definition

i'm simply pointing out that "having a feeling" is not evidence that someone has broken free from the universal chain of cause-and-effect

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@3RU7AL

And? You think I should change the definition mid debate because of what Sidewalker wants to explain with it? I have already talked about feelings and “self evident truths” in the debate.

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@baggins

"free from previous causes and events"

does not explain the feeling people get

when someone like sidewalker says "it is self-evidence because we experience it"

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@3RU7AL

“Free will” has a definition in the description of the debate that nobody challenged but thanks for providing your definition

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@baggins

"free-will" is a feeling you get when you make a decision

"free-will" is simply an emotion

"free-will" is just as "real" as "love" or "hate" or "embarrassment"

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@Sidewalker

Didn’t mean it in a bad way damn lol… whether you are right or not abracadabra just sounds funny

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@baggins

“People laugh at things they don't understand. It makes them feel safe. But it's a false feeling. They are not safer. They just feel as if they are. The world is full of people too foolish to judge the difference.” ― Catherine Ryan Hyde

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@Sidewalker

CON’s* lol I forgot I’m PRO

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@Sidewalker

"“abracadabra ILLUSION” does not change that fact. "

VOTERS whichever side youre on I don't care, I hope you appreciate PROs entertaining approach because it makes the debate fun to read (at least for me)! Thanks PRO (no sarcasm) for this, it genuinely made me chuckle! The debate has been fun for me so far, obviously neither one of us will convince the other but maybe readers will get something out of it.

Crap, just came in to see how much time I have, looks like I have one day to slash and cut as I'm sitting on 30,000 verbose characters right now, back to work to cut this beast down to size.

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@3RU7AL

That’s also a quote I used from PhD physicist Prof. Matt Young in Colorado, could’ve posted it as a source too.

Even so, the occasional quantum fluctuation would not so much grant free will as it would make our decisions somewhat random, a condition that I think proponents of free will would not particularly care for.

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@Sidewalker
@baggins

Look forward to reading this!