Coconutt wrote...
When two humans have sex that results in a child being born, their offspring randomly inherit one of the two alleles from each parent. They didn't teach you that at what ever lab you were interning in?
Okay, so I'm talking with someone of highschool level ed.
No, it's not random. Yes, I understand in highschool they tell you "one of the traits will RANDOMLY-" but it's not; everything follows a process. The thing is, in highschool, all those bindings are going to be treated as random chance because there's no point in computing that process directly, especially in natural reproduction.
It's the same as picking a colored marble out of a bowl with your eyes closed. Just because you don't see the marbles doesn't mean it's "random" even if you can use a simplified probability model to express it in highschool math class. To anyone who can see you grabbing a marble, it won't look random. Everything was a result of something prior. Your argument is just based off of the fact that you lack information. People with information (people who don't pick blind) can see that grabbing a marble followable process. The same can be said for building a genome. Or you could just throw out the finer parts of genetic engineering as a whole.
Coconutt wrote...
Ohh, i didn't know that by reducing reality to numbers, mathematicians can solve all of lifes mysteries.
That's literally the reason for which math was invented.
Coconutt wrote...
Yeah, i do agree that 2+2 is 4 every time you do the math, but numbers and math equations aren't gonna solve the question of free will.
Yeah, but it solves determinism. I'm not saying determinism solves will or anything of the like, but it is determined.
Coconutt wrote...
Because you say so right? What if a factor doesn't follow a deterministic pattern (example above)? As a physics minor you probably have heard of the Copenhagen interpretation?
The Copenhagen interpretation isn't even a falsifiable hypothesis. Did you read about this off of ifl or something?
Coconutt wrote...
Ohh, it would, because you say so? Sure for a simplistic example like falling dominos when there are relatively few factors (in this example laws of physics), but when you mountain up a stack of different factors, such as random mutation, physiology of human brain, things we can't even really explain yet like consciousness, it is not as simple as you make it out to be. Because again, your entire explanation here boils down to 'you say it will'.
Every single thing that's ever been learned has followed a direct model. So yeah, I can just "say it will," I've got enough samples to bank on it, not to mention a more credible level of education. All you're banking off of is a lack of information: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argument_from_ignorance
Coconutt wrote...
The 'conceptual choice' you supposedly make from the three cups is still only an illusion of free-will and therefore as an example exactly the same from the others as i said originally. Sure, a choice is being made and the outcome of that choice is determined, but the choice was not done by your supposed free-will.
Well, yeah, but that's why in my first post I wrote;
Personally though, I don't think that erases free will. Well, maybe some people's definition of free will, but not the bare essentials for will in general.
Restricted will is still will; the point I was making is that you can still deem something a "choice" regardless of determinism or not. That's why you can hold people accountable in court for "choosing" to commit a crime, etc. Unlike ultimate principles determinism or a lack thereof, will and choice just boil down to semantics since they're nothing more than forms.