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Religion

In reply to the discussion: We do not have free will. [View all]
We do not have free will. [View all] keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 OP
Within the context of belief in an all-powerful god... trotsky Aug 2019 #1
The Bible tells us that God has interfered with free will. Mariana Aug 2019 #6
Agreed hurl Aug 2019 #19
Why? People still sometimes make bad decisions with perfect foresight. AtheistCrusader Aug 2019 #33
Depends on what you mean by foresight hurl Aug 2019 #35
Disagree, but you are welcome to your belief. nt in2herbs Aug 2019 #2
Then you are more powerful than God. keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 #9
I can honestly say I'm more powerful than your god. Dr Hobbitstein Aug 2019 #11
See post #1. keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 #12
Cool story. Dr Hobbitstein Aug 2019 #13
Not a problem. keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 #14
A single carbon atom is more powerful than god. AtheistCrusader Aug 2019 #34
In that vein: DetlefK Aug 2019 #3
Not true. Dr Hobbitstein Aug 2019 #4
+100 sinkingfeeling Aug 2019 #5
Yep! See post #1. keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 #10
How do you know that 'rejection of god(s)' is an act of free will, Voltaire2 Aug 2019 #17
Because I made said conscious decision. nt Dr Hobbitstein Aug 2019 #23
Did you sleep on it first? Voltaire2 Aug 2019 #24
Since no one knows what free will is... Girard442 Aug 2019 #7
If it stays, your statement is allowed. keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 #8
You are right. MarvinGardens Aug 2019 #15
Only atheists have free will Cartoonist Aug 2019 #16
except this atheist who thinks 'free will' is an entirely dubious concept in a material universe. Voltaire2 Aug 2019 #18
How can your will be "Free" uriel1972 Aug 2019 #20
Within bounds Cartoonist Aug 2019 #25
Because free doesn't necessarily mean unconstrained qazplm135 Aug 2019 #27
If it is bound, why call it free? uriel1972 Aug 2019 #36
because words can have subtlety qazplm135 Aug 2019 #37
true... uriel1972 Aug 2019 #39
no it doesn't qazplm135 Aug 2019 #42
"Research also shows that we retain veto power over a decision." trotsky Aug 2019 #43
It's literally the same study he is citing: qazplm135 Aug 2019 #44
That's only in the context of actions studied. You are suggesting a much broader interpretation. trotsky Aug 2019 #45
I didn't say qazplm135 Aug 2019 #47
Then people don't have the same free will. trotsky Aug 2019 #53
People usually have different constraints qazplm135 Aug 2019 #55
You're writing a lot of words to try and distract from the fact that you want it both ways. trotsky Aug 2019 #56
Yawn qazplm135 Aug 2019 #57
Actually, it is your fault, as I pointed out. trotsky Aug 2019 #58
First off Cartoonist Aug 2019 #46
I've been wondering if this is a valid position: OriginalGeek Aug 2019 #31
I start from the assumption that we exist Voltaire2 Aug 2019 #32
quantum physics kills that qazplm135 Aug 2019 #38
Quantum physics breaks down at the atomic level... uriel1972 Aug 2019 #40
our decisions qazplm135 Aug 2019 #41
if your claim is that "free will" emerges from quantum (or other) randomness Voltaire2 Aug 2019 #60
Considering his claim was about qazplm135 Aug 2019 #61
No it allows for random events. Voltaire2 Aug 2019 #62
Again... qazplm135 Aug 2019 #63
Yes your mythical free will requires some level of non-determinism. Voltaire2 Aug 2019 #66
See this is why I rarely bother with this qazplm135 Aug 2019 #67
Yes, so where is the evidence for free will? Voltaire2 Aug 2019 #68
So all of these trained experts qazplm135 Aug 2019 #74
Yes randomness can be a component of free will. Jim__ Aug 2019 #64
again this just reduces free will to "non-deterministic' behavior. Voltaire2 Aug 2019 #65
No, it doesn't. It introduces conscious control into the search and deliberation processes. Jim__ Aug 2019 #69
except that when neurologists go looking for this alleged 'conscious control' what they find instead Voltaire2 Aug 2019 #70
From your citation: "The illusion may only apply to a small set of our choices ..." Jim__ Aug 2019 #71
yeah because of the limitations of the investigative tools (fMRI) only simple experiments can be Voltaire2 Aug 2019 #72
The limitations of the investigative tools constitute limitations on what you can learn ... Jim__ Aug 2019 #73
Did you really think this through? uriel1972 Aug 2019 #21
"Within the context of belief in an all-powerful god..." keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 #22
Then we are all puppets qazplm135 Aug 2019 #28
For those who believe in an all-powerful God. keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 #30
I was taught that in Ctholic school. I never believed it. It was made up. When ever something wasupaloopa Aug 2019 #52
Most people don't have free will watoos Aug 2019 #26
Isaiah 45:7 LuvNewcastle Aug 2019 #29
Yes, he seems to have created an awful lot of evil! FiveGoodMen Aug 2019 #78
"We do not have free will." Quite possibly true. Iggo Aug 2019 #48
Not a problem. You don't have to believe in an all-powerful God. keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 #49
... Major Nikon Aug 2019 #50
So you are not responcible for your actions since you did not use your free will to choose to do wasupaloopa Aug 2019 #51
What free will? keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 #54
Maybe it was norepinephrine. Act_of_Reparation Aug 2019 #59
We are a function of decisions we make, decisions we do not make... lonely bird Aug 2019 #75
When's your God going to take responsibility SHRED Aug 2019 #76
Like you're god paleotn Aug 2019 #77
No! I'm not Mitt Romney in his future. keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 #79
Hi keithbvadu2 - thank you for posting this very interesting topic. Pendrench Aug 2019 #80
Thanks. Your article dives deep into the subject. keithbvadu2 Aug 2019 #81
Latest Discussions»Issue Forums»Religion»We do not have free will.»Reply #79