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Post 20

Friday, July 14, 2006 - 11:31pmSanction this postReply
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(Ed)For all existence, one is what one repeatedly does. For humans, you are what you repeatedly intend. The 'self' is that unique intentionality.

(Nick)Human beings repeatedly rob and rape and murder. Is that what they are, robbers, rapers, and murders? And, if it is what they intend, if someone intends to be a hero but runs like a coward when it is time for him to make a stand, is he what he does or what he intends?

And, this still doesn't get to the question of where the self is located.

bis bald,

Nick 


Post 21

Saturday, July 15, 2006 - 11:38pmSanction this postReply
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Nick, I accidentally clicked the check-mark and gave you a sanction -- even though your reply, which trades on ambiguities; is complete hogwash. Please disregard the unmeant sanction (it is not my honest appraisal of your reply).


===============
Human beings repeatedly rob and rape and murder. Is that what they are, robbers, rapers, and murders?
===============

The first thing wrong with this line of reasoning -- is that it's not specific to humans (animals do these things all the time). In fact, it can be argued that, because humans don't do these things all the time (like other animals do), that that is a key difference between humans and animals.

The second thing wrong with this line of reasoning -- is that it is an unwarranted generalization. It generalizes from a specific and narrow subsection of the public -- the robbers, rapers, and murderers -- a subsection so small that it probably doesn't even exceed 5% of the total; and this is taken to stand for all of humanity (rather than looking at the whole).

So, 19 out of every 20 people don't do these things -- yet you think that that doesn't hurt your intended point of argument? Give me a break, please.



=================
And, if it is what they intend, if someone intends to be a hero but runs like a coward when it is time for him to make a stand, is he what he does or what he intends?
And, this still doesn't get to the question of where the self is located.

In my post, I was using the term "intentional" to refer to "aboutness." When humans use their conceptual apparatus to think -- they are really thinking "about" things, rather than thinking about concepts of things (concepts are the human tool used in order to think about things).

In contrast, you are using "intention" in the sense of a directed desire -- as when it becomes someone's intention to plant a flower, or rob a bank, etc. Your line of reasoning is off the mark, then (as it trades on an ambiguity).



=================
And, this still doesn't get to the question of where the self is located.
=================

Here, the ambiguity is that -- if the self exists -- then it must be located in space and time (like all material entities are). My initial quip to you -- that your "self" was the origin of the spelling errors in your post -- was meant to be a sufficient (though not complete) answer to your question.

Instead of locating your "self" on a grid somewhere in space and time -- I identified your "self" by what it is that it was originating (the self is that which can originate things). In the case of the spelling errors, there is no other explanation than that they were originated by your "self."

Your "self" was acting intentionally (ie. you were arguing "about" something), and that is how to recognize a self in the world. A self is that thing which can originate questions and arguments (and, as you've made brazenly clear, simple errors).

If you ever find yourself in argument with another human being -- you can be sure that the source of their arguing is their "self." A "self" is not so mysterious as you -- and probably other existentialist-friendly thinkers -- would readily admit to.

Look for the products of "selves" (not their material location in space). To look for their location in this manner -- is to bark up the wrong tree.

Ed


Post 22

Sunday, July 16, 2006 - 10:32amSanction this postReply
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So, Ed, you ridicule me for making spelling errors, yet you make errors in awarding me value points. Which is worse?

I think, Ed, that you are the one being ambiguous.

Your reasoning that non-human animals rob, rape, and murder is weak. f hey are dong simply what ther natures requre, then they are not capable of doing immoral things. Robbing, raping, and murder are, by definition, immoral things.

To say that these things are done by a low percentage of the population is misleading. If anyone in the population is capable of runnng a 4-minute mile, it defines the capabilities for the entire population. And, the mean of the population of earth is different from the mean of the population of western civilizations. And, we are not talking about the polliticians who perpetrate all kinds of atrocites on people on a scale much worse than the harm to society done by recognized criminals.

And, I still think doing is more descriptive of what a person is than intending, even if you mean conceptual thinking.

Finally, if the Taj Mahal is the product of a self, it is not a self that can be arrested for murder or feel pride or shame for his or her accomplishments. Yes, the Taj is reflectve of a self, but it s not the self that built it. It is an object, a creation of that self. 

bis bald,

Nick


Post 23

Sunday, July 16, 2006 - 5:52pmSanction this postReply
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Nick,

==================
So, Ed, you ridicule me for making spelling errors, yet you make errors in awarding me value points. Which is worse?
==================

Of course my error was the worse, Nick, but that's not the point (sheesh, even when correcting me -- you get it wrong). The point was that the self is that thing that originates all error in the world (and the self is also the origin of much beauty, conventional art and otherwise).

The only way for their to be error -- is to have a self that intended something. In a sense then, all error is man-made (as is all art). What's right is what is meta-physical (what is right is right by its very nature).


==================
Your reasoning that non-human animals rob, rape, and murder is weak.
==================

I know the analogy, in a sense, is guilty of being a weak analogy (ie. a fallacy of logic) -- because lions don't choose to live off of antelope and gazelle (they just do), but that, again, is not my point. My point was about how you took these nonessential characteristics of humans, as a viable stepping stone in an argument leading somewhere.


==================
To say that these things are done by a low percentage of the population is misleading. If anyone in the population is capable of runnng a 4-minute mile, it defines the capabilities for the entire population.
==================

Okay, but then heroism ALSO defines capabilities of man. Man the hero. And, guess what? It's easy to see how some folks could wrongly believe that stealing is good, but how much more intellectual integrity would be required for someone to reach the point of acting like a hero? And yet some still do. What does that have to say about the species of mankind? It sounds like we are a pretty awesome species, if you ask me.


==================
And, I still think doing is more descriptive of what a person is than intending, even if you mean conceptual thinking.
==================

In a sense, you are more right than me (the purpose of thought is action), but again, I'm using 'intentionality' to mean that when we think, we think "about" things -- real things that beckon our actions.

Ed



Post 24

Tuesday, July 18, 2006 - 10:59amSanction this postReply
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In a sense, you are more right than me (the purpose of thought is action), but again, I'm using 'intentionality' to mean that when we think, we think "about" things -- real things that beckon our actions.

Is the self an object or subject? Please be clear.

Nick


Post 25

Tuesday, July 18, 2006 - 11:57pmSanction this postReply
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Nick,

=======================
Is the self an object or subject? Please be clear.
=======================

First of all, all thinking is thinking of a subject about an object (that's essential to the verb "thinking"). For much of the thinking that goes on in the world, the self is basically a subject. In the special case of introspection, however, the self 'becomes' an object. This is because of what is essential to the verb "thinking."

Clear enough?

Ed

Post 26

Wednesday, July 19, 2006 - 6:46amSanction this postReply
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First of all, all thinking is thinking of a subject about an object (that's essential to the verb "thinking"). For much of the thinking that goes on in the world, the self is basically a subject. In the special case of introspection, however, the self 'becomes' an object. This is because of what is essential to the verb "thinking."

Clear enough?

It is getting there. I agree that human thinking is of a subject about an object, and humans are the subjects. In introspection, however, there is a problem of turning the eyes back in on themselves to observe what it is that is observing. It can't be done as completely as it can when subjects observe other external objects.

I can, in my imagination, place myself on a platform above myself and look down on me. Then, I can go above that and look down on me as I am looking down on me. Then I can go above all that etc. on into infinty, like looking in a mirror at myself looking in a mrror, but like in that situation, I can never get to the end.

This is why humans will never have the completed, fixed nature that non-humans have. Yes, we try to objectify them, make them fixed, but people resist that. We want the freedom to become, to work on our own natures, even if we never get to the end.

This is Existentialst talk. It deals with the uniqeness of human subjectivity better than Objectvist talk, which only speaks of humans as other objects with specific natures but also free will, volitional consciousness.

bis bald,

Nick


Post 27

Wednesday, July 19, 2006 - 8:58pmSanction this postReply
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Nick,

This is Existentialst talk. It deals with the uniqeness of human subjectivity better than Objectvist talk, which only speaks of humans as other objects with specific natures but also free will, volitional consciousness.
I don't agree. Also, even though we sometimes appear to be free to be happy in any way we choose -- there is an objective (shared) nature of man; there are necessary ingredients for human happiness. Existentialist overlooks this, and that makes Existentialism stink -- as a philosophy for living on earth well.

There are parts of us that are unique, and there are parts of us that are not. Only objective philosophy recognizes this dynamic.

Ed


Post 28

Wednesday, July 19, 2006 - 10:20pmSanction this postReply
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There are parts of us that are unique, and there are parts of us that are not. Only objective philosophy recognizes this dynamic.
Objectivism does not deal well with the dynamic that man is a free subjectivity, and Exstentialsm goes too far with relativity. There are some absolutes and fixed nature aspects of humans. NickOtani'sNeo-Objectivism deals with this better than either Objectivism or Existentialsm in their pure forms. It allows for freedom within generalizable parameters. 

bis bald,

Nick


Post 29

Wednesday, July 19, 2006 - 11:43pmSanction this postReply
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Well, 'Nick Otani's Neo-Objectivism' is a NO NO -- if you ask me.

;-)

Ed
[... because it sounds like it doesn't capture what was indeed captured by Rand's version -- eg. her thoughts on a 'Sense of Life', for instance?]

Post 30

Thursday, July 20, 2006 - 6:01amSanction this postReply
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I don't see any conflict with NONO and SOLO. Please point out the specific problems.

bis bald,

Nick 


Post 31

Thursday, July 20, 2006 - 9:41amSanction this postReply
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Nick,

Specific Problem #1:
======================
In introspection, however, there is a problem of turning the eyes back in on themselves to observe what it is that is observing. It can't be done as completely as it can when subjects observe other external objects.
======================

This 'problem' arbitrarily assumes that introspection has to be as 'complete' as extro-spection (weak analogy fallacy, coupled with a straw-man fallacy -- in order to appear to make a point).

It fails to integrate that the objective view of the mind is the 1st-person view of it (3rd-person views of another's mind are, necessarily, subjective views). This case is the reverse of what is usual, and a common error of even professional philosophers.



Problem #2:
======================
Yes, we try to objectify them, make them fixed, but people resist that. We want the freedom to become, to work on our own natures, even if we never get to the end.
======================

While it's true that we want this freedom (it's within our shared human nature to want this; ie. it is an objective value), it is arbitrary to state that we "try" to make folks fixed -- and subsequently try to generalize from that.

While some humans yearn for a changeless relationship to others (where there is no learning or growing), healthy humans don't. In a sense, this line of reasoning trades on a mental defect (which is assumed true of all of us).



Problem #3
======================
... Objectvist talk, which only speaks of humans as other objects with specific natures but also free will, volitional consciousness.
======================

But Rand had so much more to say about individuality than this short quip. I won't list examples of what it is that is patently obvious (I'm 'above' that).



Problem #4
======================
man is a free subjectivity
======================

This is not a sufficient description of man. It fails to integrate our shared human nature. In a sense then, it is actually a false description of man.


Ed

Post 32

Thursday, July 20, 2006 - 11:22pmSanction this postReply
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(Ed)This 'problem' arbitrarily assumes that introspection has to be as 'complete' as extro-spection (weak analogy fallacy, coupled with a straw-man fallacy -- in order to appear to make a point).

 

It fails to integrate that the objective view of the mind is the 1st-person view of it (3rd-person views of another's mind are, necessarily, subjective views). This case is the reverse of what is usual, and a common error of even professional philosophers.

 

(Nick)If introspection is not as complete as extro-spection, then the 1st person integration of the mind requires many more inductive leaps than the more complete extro-spection. In effect, one is creating a self, not discovering it. This is not Objectivism. It is Subjectivism.

 

(Ed)While it's true that we want this freedom (it's within our shared human nature to want this; ie. it is an objective value), it is arbitrary to state that we "try" to make folks fixed -- and subsequently try to generalize from that.

While some humans yearn for a changeless relationship to others (where there is no learning or growing), healthy humans don't. In a sense, this line of reasoning trades on a mental defect (which is assumed true of all of us).

 

(Nick)We try to make folks objects. When people are objects, it means they are acted upon, used like tools. Women don’t like to be sex objects. It means they can’t do anything. Other people do things to them. We should treat people as subjects, not objects. Relationships should be subject-subject, not subject-object. Sartre said Hell is other people. He was thinking of all the ways people observe us and try to make us objects. If there were no other people in the world, we would be free, not worried about our appearance to others. We do feel free when we are behind a screen, observing others. Those others are objects to us. When someone notices us, then we become the object in their eyes. Our freedom is threatened. When we think we are alone, we feel free. We pick our noses or masturbate. We don’t feel shame until someone notices us. We see ourselves as they see us. It takes someone with a strong ego to not worry about what others think of him or her. If I don’t respect the people who look down on me, who judge me and determine that I am worthy of ridicule, then I feel no more shame than I would if an insect perceived me in an unflattering way. Never-the-less, I won’t tolerate it. I seek people who respect me, who treat me as a subject, and I will treat them as such. Both Rand and Sartre, as well as Kant, thought people should treat each other as ends, not as means.

 

(Ed)But Rand had so much more to say about individuality than this short quip. I won't list examples of what it is that is patently obvious (I'm 'above' that).


(Nick)NickOtani’sNeo-Objectivism preserves what Rand says about man’s independent and unchanging, fixed, nature, but it also includes Sartre’s freedom to become, within Objectivism’s parameters.

 

Bis bald,

 

Nick  

 


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Post 33

Friday, July 21, 2006 - 12:27amSanction this postReply
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Nick,


====================
If introspection is not as complete as extro-spection, then the 1st person integration of the mind requires many more inductive leaps than the more complete extro-spection. In effect, one is creating a self, not discovering it. This is not Objectivism. It is Subjectivism.
====================

Please put that in a syllogism (or series of syllogisms). It is currently an enthymeme (wherein intermediary premises are being merely assumed). And I'm pretty sure it will fall on it's face, if it is understood sufficiently (as syllogisms afford).



====================
Women don’t like to be sex objects. It means they can’t do anything. Other people do things to them. We should treat people as subjects, not objects.
====================

Women can be perceived as (sexual) objects of desire, and they can also be whole persons. There doesn't have to be a necessary dichotomy here. There can be a time to treat someone as a subject, and there can be a time to treat someone as an object (either of desire, or of research).

We should treat people as subjects when it is appropriate to treat them so (ie. in the right contexts).



====================
Sartre said Hell is other people. He was thinking of all the ways people observe us and try to make us objects. If there were no other people in the world, we would be free, not worried about our appearance to others.
====================

Sartre didn't know what the 'Hell' he was talking about. Caught up in a primitive 'social-metaphysics' -- the man gave other's views of him primacy (a primacy of consciousness, over-and-above the more proper primacy of existence). You don't need to be the only person in the world -- in order to be free. Sartre was dead-wrong there.



====================
When someone notices us, then we become the object in their eyes. Our freedom is threatened.
====================

Only the freedom of the short-sighted and simple-minded (like Sartre was). Only the freedom of those who readily give up their freedom to the irrational and un-objective whims of other people.



====================
We don’t feel shame until someone notices us. We see ourselves as they see us.
====================

See above.



====================
It takes someone with a strong ego to not worry about what others think of him or her. If I don’t respect the people who look down on me, who judge me and determine that I am worthy of ridicule, then I feel no more shame than I would if an insect perceived me in an unflattering way.
====================

Now (finally) you're getting somewhere. Now (finally) you're acknowledging the objectivity of personal existence. Now (finally) you're alluding to a primacy of existence -- over-and-above a primacy of consciousness 'social metaphysics'. You, here, answer your own conundrums (just listen to yourself, man).



====================
NickOtani’sNeo-Objectivism preserves what Rand says about man’s independent and unchanging, fixed, nature, but it also includes Sartre’s freedom to become,
====================

As if Rand didn't include a freedom to become! Give me a break.

Ed

Post 34

Friday, July 21, 2006 - 11:50amSanction this postReply
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====================
If introspection is not as complete as extro-spection, then the 1st person integration of the mind requires many more inductive leaps than the more complete extro-spection. In effect, one is creating a self, not discovering it. This is not Objectivism. It is Subjectivism.
====================

(Ed)Please put that in a syllogism (or series of syllogisms). It is currently an enthymeme (wherein intermediary premises are being merely assumed). And I'm pretty sure it will fall on it's face, if it is understood sufficiently (as syllogisms afford).


(Nick)Intermediary premises are not being merely assumed. They are being omitted out of respect for the intelligence of the reader. If I explain things too much, people sometimes think I am being condescending. I try, therefore, to assume my reader can make connections, but I can be wrong sometimes. Anyway, our empirical observations are always influenced by attitudes and prior learning. (I refer to my post on perception, logic, and language for a short course on perception.) The more our perceptions are limited, the more uncertain they become, the more we have to connect the dots in our minds. So, the more we act on what we perceive rather than simply discover it. If we are acting on something rather than simply discovering it, we are participating in creating it. Reality is, to some extent, in the subjective eye of the beholder. When that beholder examines the tools he or she uses to examine, turning the eyes back in on themselves to observe what observes, the inductive leaps become even greater than normal, when the eyes are looking outward.

 

If inspection is incomplete, mental integration is necessary to make it more complete.

Introspection is less complete than extro-spection.

Therefore, greater mental integration is necessary to make introspection as complete as extro-spection.

 

Greater mental integration requires greater mental action on the part of the inspector; it is not passive discovery.

Introspection requires active participation on the part of the inspector.

Introspection is active, not passive.

 

The greater something depends on the mental, as opposed to the empirical, the less objective it becomes.

The mental comes from within the observer and is not independent of him, objective, unless one adopts the permanency and independence of platonic forms or the a priori mathematical truths which cannot be observed empirically.

Imagination is the mental construction of truths which cannot be verified completely by empirical observation.

 

====================
Women don’t like to be sex objects. It means they can’t do anything. Other people do things to them. We should treat people as subjects, not objects.
====================

Women can be perceived as (sexual) objects of desire, and they can also be whole persons. There doesn't have to be a necessary dichotomy here. There can be a time to treat someone as a subject, and there can be a time to treat someone as an object (either of desire, or of research).

We should treat people as subjects when it is appropriate to treat them so (ie. in the right contexts).

 

(Nick)Rand would never say such a thing. She would never submit to being used, except when she is surrendering to a man. This is her non-feminist side with which many disagree. Her novels are about the individualists who would not subjugate themselves to others.

 

====================
Sartre said Hell is other people. He was thinking of all the ways people observe us and try to make us objects. If there were no other people in the world, we would be free, not worried about our appearance to others.
====================

(Ed)Sartre didn't know what the 'Hell' he was talking about. Caught up in a primitive 'social-metaphysics' -- the man gave other's views of him primacy (a primacy of consciousness, over-and-above the more proper primacy of existence). You don't need to be the only person in the world -- in order to be free. Sartre was dead-wrong there.


(Nick) don’t think you are trying to understand. You are shifting from an abstract statement to concrete interpretations.


====================
When someone notices us, then we become the object in their eyes. Our freedom is threatened.
====================

(Ed)Only the freedom of the short-sighted and simple-minded (like Sartre was). Only the freedom of those who readily give up their freedom to the irrational and un-objective whims of other people.

(Nick)Allowing one’s self to be used as an object is giving up freedom. You said, above “there can be a time to treat someone as an object…”

==============
It takes someone with a strong ego to not worry about what others think of him or her. If I don’t respect the people who look down on me, who judge me and determine that I am worthy of ridicule, then I feel no more shame than I would if an insect perceived me in an unflattering way.
====================

(Ed)Now (finally) you're getting somewhere. Now (finally) you're acknowledging the objectivity of personal existence. Now (finally) you're alluding to a primacy of existence -- over-and-above a primacy of consciousness 'social metaphysics'. You, here, answer your own conundrums (just listen to yourself, man).

 

(Nick)Have you read my post about Prufrock and Henley, the subject and the object?

====================
NickOtani’sNeo-Objectivism preserves what Rand says about man’s independent and unchanging, fixed, nature, but it also includes Sartre’s freedom to become,
====================

(Ed)As if Rand didn't include a freedom to become! Give me a break.

 

(Nick)She doesn’t deal with it effectively. She declares it to be self-evdent that man has free will, but this conflicts with her advocacy of an objective reality and causality. A more complete philosophy must do more than this. Existentialism does more than this, and NickOtani’sNeo-objectivism does more still.

 

Bis bald,

 

Nick


Post 35

Tuesday, July 25, 2006 - 8:43pmSanction this postReply
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Nick,

==================
Reality is, to some extent, in the subjective eye of the beholder. When that beholder examines the tools he or she uses to examine, turning the eyes back in on themselves to observe what observes, the inductive leaps become even greater than normal, when the eyes are looking outward.
==================

This is Kantian. What you're saying is that even careful introspection is not rationally justified as a reliable means to knowledge. As Kant quipped, you can have internal impressions -- but you can never get to the "real thing." In other words, Kant (and you, by implication) aren't "really" aware of your impression of things -- but only of impressions of your impressions. You don't even know your own thoughts.

Bullshit.

Ed

Post 36

Tuesday, July 25, 2006 - 10:17pmSanction this postReply
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No, Kant merely said we can't get to the noumena beyond the phenomena. There is an ultimate truth, but all we have are appearances. Other philosophers don't buy that there even is an ultimate truth, that appearances are all there are.

I don't thnk you know for certain what my position is yet. Your leaps are getting pretty long.

And, the word "Bullshit" is not a logical argument which is capable of proving or refuting anything. 

You asked me to submit syllogisms, and I did. Are you going to deal with them? Are you going to check the truthness of the premises or the validity of the forms? Or, are you just going to say this sounds like Kant and is bullshit? You are not being very philosophical, Ed.

Suppose I tell you everything you say is bullshit. Would we make any progress? Would this provoke thought in you or disgust?

bis bald,

Nick


Post 37

Wednesday, July 26, 2006 - 1:07amSanction this postReply
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Nick,

====================
Are you going to check the truthness of the premises or the validity of the forms? Or, are you just going to say this sounds like Kant and is bullshit? You are not being very philosophical, Ed.

====================

Good comeback. I like your "style." I will answer when I have the kind of time that an adequate answer deserves.

Ed


Post 38

Saturday, August 19, 2006 - 3:11pmSanction this postReply
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For all existence, one is what one repeatedly does. For humans, you are what you repeatedly intend. The 'self' is that unique intentionality.

Sometimes yes, sometimes no. If you intend to be a hero but run when you have your big chance, you are what you do. However, if you accidently drop a bomb on a city killing innocent people, you are not as guilty as someone who intended to drop it. (Of course, to the people killed, it doesn't make much difference.) 

We usually determine the nature of animals by observation and generalzation. What they do tells us what kind of entity they are. Humans rob and kill people, so some people think humans are the evil by nature. If left alone on a desserted island, they would destroy it and each other, like in The Lord of the Flies. Others say man is not all that bad but institutons make him that way. Still others say he is potential and can choose or create his own nature. This is only true if man is free.

Religious people say they believe in free-will. They insist they believe in free-will because it is in their doctrine. Man is free, they say, to choose not to obey God. Yes, he will be punished if he does, but he is free to be punished. It is not like he has no choice at all.

Objectivists also say they believe in freedom. Rand said man has free-will. Yes, they also believe in causation and an objective reality which cannot be controlled by man. They believe in immutable laws of logic and physics, but they also believe in free-will because Rand said entites cause things, and this somehow fits in, self-evidently, with thier other beliefs.

No, it doesn't fit. If man has a fixed nature and actions have reasons, then there is no possibility for free-will.  Man may intend to do something, but he is no more free to do it than is a wind-up mechanical toy, a clock-work orange.

bis bald,

Nick


Post 39

Saturday, August 19, 2006 - 3:55pmSanction this postReply
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If man has a fixed nature and actions have reasons, then there is no possibility for free-will.  Man may intend to do something, but he is no more free to do it than is a wind-up mechanical toy, a clock-work orange.

Then that must make it how bald bis Nick is...... ;-)


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