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/ wrote:A bit of both, a bit of neither.
I think that there are countless factors that interact and influence probability to make a certain outcome most likely, but all the same, I think that even if we had a perfect understanding of every factor, there is a certain underlying chaos that can never be truly measured constantly changing the system.
Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
nietzsche wrote:/ wrote:A bit of both, a bit of neither.
I think that there are countless factors that interact and influence probability to make a certain outcome most likely, but all the same, I think that even if we had a perfect understanding of every factor, there is a certain underlying chaos that can never be truly measured constantly changing the system.
Ok 2 questions.
1. Do you think that if we were able to measure somehow, or someone (hypothetical) outside the universe was able to measure everything, given that he had paused time and introduced all the data to his mega super computer, would he be able to predict what was next, for every particle and subparticle, every bit of energy, to the point to predict your life second after second?
2. In your every day life, you act believing you have free will?
/ wrote:1.
Well, since I’m not a quantum physicist from the 8th dimension (or as it’s probably known there, elementary school level computer programming), I dunno, my opinion is stupid and useless. Many smart folks over here do suspect randomness does exist on a subatomic level though, such as in waveforms. So no, as best as I can understand, while there are paths that are set in stone through the laws of physics, the precise path everything in the universe takes cannot be predicted.
waauw wrote:/ wrote:1.
Well, since I’m not a quantum physicist from the 8th dimension (or as it’s probably known there, elementary school level computer programming), I dunno, my opinion is stupid and useless. Many smart folks over here do suspect randomness does exist on a subatomic level though, such as in waveforms. So no, as best as I can understand, while there are paths that are set in stone through the laws of physics, the precise path everything in the universe takes cannot be predicted.
I don't know anything about quantum physics either, but I always just interpreted 'randomness' as extreme complexity that we just don't understand yet. So wouldn't that mean this 'randomness' is also predictable given enough knowledge and understanding?
crispybits wrote:I always thought of it more as all the possibilities theoretically exist but only one reality actually exists, and we only get knowledge of the reality when we look at it. To use Schroedinger's cat, the cat is either dead or alive as a matter of fact, but until we open the box we can't say anything about the actual state of the cat, so we have to say both possibilities exist simultaneously. But I'm not claiming to be an expert.
nietzsche wrote:Regardless, I've chosen to believe in free will, and those discussion on my head don't come up too often anymore.
crispybits wrote:nietzsche wrote:Regardless, I've chosen to believe in free will, and those discussion on my head don't come up too often anymore.
Did you have a choice to believe in it?
That's not so flippant a question as it sounds by the way. You can be persuaded into believing something, but I'm not so sure someone can actually choose to believe something. I could imagine all sorts of hypothetical things that may or may not be true and there's no evidence either way. Say there is a form of submarine life with an intelligence level that equals ours living under the ice layer on one of the ocean moons of Jupiter or Saturn. Can't prove it either way (at least not yet). It's very difficult to even give a decent probability estimate. Can you choose yes or no to believing that proposition? Can you choose to be convinced of either the truth or falseness of it?
AndyDufresne wrote:I vote Star Trek.
--Andy
Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
crispybits wrote:nietzsche do you believe that your free will is a conscious thing? Suppose someone showed you evidence that at best all of our choices are made subconciously (so concious intention to choose doesn't factor in) would that alter your view at all?
waauw wrote:/ wrote:1.
Well, since I’m not a quantum physicist from the 8th dimension (or as it’s probably known there, elementary school level computer programming), I dunno, my opinion is stupid and useless. Many smart folks over here do suspect randomness does exist on a subatomic level though, such as in waveforms. So no, as best as I can understand, while there are paths that are set in stone through the laws of physics, the precise path everything in the universe takes cannot be predicted.
I don't know anything about quantum physics either, but I always just interpreted 'randomness' as extreme complexity that we just don't understand yet. So wouldn't that mean this 'randomness' is also predictable given enough knowledge and understanding?
crispybits wrote:I always thought of it more as all the possibilities theoretically exist but only one reality actually exists, and we only get knowledge of the reality when we look at it. To use Schroedinger's cat, the cat is either dead or alive as a matter of fact, but until we open the box we can't say anything about the actual state of the cat, so we have to say both possibilities exist simultaneously. But I'm not claiming to be an expert.
nietzsche wrote:/ wrote:A bit of both, a bit of neither.
I think that there are countless factors that interact and influence probability to make a certain outcome most likely, but all the same, I think that even if we had a perfect understanding of every factor, there is a certain underlying chaos that can never be truly measured constantly changing the system.
Ok 2 questions.
1. Do you think that if we were able to measure somehow, or someone (hypothetical) outside the universe was able to measure everything, given that he had paused time and introduced all the data to his mega super computer, would he be able to predict what was next, for every particle and subparticle, every bit of energy, to the point to predict your life second after second?
BigBallinStalin wrote:Here's the true but vague answer: some aspects of one's life are deterministic, while other aspects are left to one's free will. It's on some spectrum, and the dichotomy is likely insufficient to explain the range of outcomes from human behavior (due to problems of measurement and definition). So, please end this awful debate forever and ever.
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