Hi Azy
Based on our knowledge of the basics rules that govern our universe and that we don't actually know of any reason why they would not govern our brains.
That is wrong, you keep saying that, but it's wrong wrong wrong. Just repeating the argument doesn't make it true! Like I said before. There's a difference between saying that you believe the brain works trough causal forces, and believing that these causal forces are directly responsible for our will. And like I said, my personal inclination is that there is actually causal processes in our brain. However you're not
only assuming that there's causal relations in our brains, you're
also assuming that our free will is a direct result of it! Basically that makes as much sense as saying: "we see that cars and houses and lakes and mountains and distant stars and galaxies don't have souls, so why would humans have a soul if we haven't found it anywhere else.
Well it is when you start saying "this isn't scientifically proven, logically this and this could happen" and then "hey, you haven't considered a spiritual cause". Does that not sound like science and religion to you?
No it doesn't sound like that at all. It sounds like "your interpretation of science vs religion" Because like we have all repeatedly said to you: science is completely neutral in this point. So it's never science vs religion. It's you trying to back your personal ideas and arguments up with science (but failing to do so).
It's not impossible that we're all avatars acting out the wishes of a race of invisible supersquids living under the surface of neptune, communicating their desires by superluminal telepathy.
There's a huge difference. I'm not making any assumptions whoms validity rely on whether or not the above is true. However you
are making assumptions whoms validity rely on whether or not there could be a spiritual cause. And like I said, there
are many indication of a spiritual soul, so your ridiculous analogy of the neptune creatures is highly inapt.
That doesn't mean it would have any credibility, unless there was sufficient reason to think that it might be true, not just that it might be possible.
So things can only be true if there's sufficient reason to think they are true. That's a very bold arrogant statement. there used to be a time when there weren't any reasons to think that the earth isn't the center of the universe. If people would have your attitude, we'd still be in those dark ages. Regardlessly, that's irrelevant, like I said, there are lots of indications of a soul.
By your own reasoning science has no business with free will, so why start arguing this point?
Again your many strawmen arguments could mean one of two things:
1. You're deliberately trying to make me look bad by making up strawmen-arguments.
2. You're not paying close attention to what I'm saying and just trying to "fight" anything that I post.
Anyway: no, by my reasoning science is still neutral since the indications we have are not conclusive, that however doesn't exclude that we do have indications of the existence of a soul. That also doesn't exclude indications towards a stage-universe trough which the souls traverse. In other words, there are indications that make my view a lot more plausible than yours.
No arguing by links please.
Hi chuck
don't worry, I didn't disagree with you just because he misquoted you. Rather I disagree because I think that any current forms of AI that we have are by design not build to be intelligent, but rather built to mimic human intelligence. So the AI lacks a cognitive factor. For example a chatbot doesn't respond in a certain way because he thinks that is intelligent, he simply does so because we programmed him to respond that way because the programmers think that such a response is an intelligent response. (Or in the case of a chatbot who learns, the people talking to him take function as "programmers"). Similar things can be said about other AI. Like program that makes abstract poetry, it reads articles online, and looks at which words are often combined in sentences and builds associations. So what it does, it's simply programmed to analyse intelligent writings, and copy that intelligence into abstract art. The program however doesn't make any statements or doesn't convey any feelings with his "art" as opposed to an artist. this cognitive factor is very crucial to "free will". Inserting randomness into a line of program may in a sense make the program "free" but it doesn't give the program "willpower".