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by Layke1123
1957 days ago
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In both scenarios, no free will exists. I didn't trigger my brain processes, only observed them. Neither did you. You are trying to paint a single scenario in which there is an important distinction and then ignore any other scenario where your reasoning fails. For instance, if I chose to kill myself, and you stop me, and I later thank you for stopping me from killing myself, is that difference important? Yes or no? |
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Not by your definition, no. It does by mine. As I have repeatedly remarked in various places in this discussion, please stop getting hung up on that term; I purposely did not use it at all in my description of the two scenarios in order to avoid that.
> I didn't trigger my brain processes, only observed them. Neither did you.
Your brain processes are part of you, just as my brain processes are part of me. So to say "you" didn't trigger your brain processes is nonsense.
> if I chose to kill myself, and you stop me, and I later thank you for stopping me from killing myself, is that difference important?
You mean the difference that you thanked me afterwards? As opposed to telling me you wished I hadn't stopped you? Yes, that difference is important, because it tells me whether or not my choice to stop you was the right one.
However, your implication that my reasoning "fails" in a situation like this is incorrect. I have never claimed that respecting other people's free choice is the only value, or that it should automatically override all other values. One can always find cases where different values clash, and there is no way to resolve any such case without violating some value. So pointing out that my viewpoint is vulnerable to this proves nothing. So is yours. So is anyone's.