Free will is a testable hypothesis, which was tested and refined for around 30 years now (cf. Benjamin Libet experiment), which showed "that thing" that we recognize as free will is actually extremely predictable. Fair enough, maybe we just had the wrong definition.. 1/n
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Replying to @InertialObservr @HerbertHitchens
I like to shave with Ocamm"s razor. Hard to imagine you'd be able to predict that I would tweet this tweet based on a set of initial conditions 13 billion years ago.
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Replying to @cenobyte3 @InertialObservr
I could if I have all the relevant information about the universe that gave rise to this moment (you tweeting). All I need are information about past events, in conjunction with the laws of nature to predict the current states (on a classical scale anyways).
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LaPlace demon would be in such a position I described above. Such a being has the ability to know about the future or even the past based solely on information and the laws of nature. With chaos theory, the problem is “information”. If we have it, problem solved.
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Replying to @HerbertHitchens @cenobyte3
Even if you had all the information you would still only be able to predict things with various probabilities, but still.. The fact that 100 of you, in the same initial conditions, would do x 70% of the time and y the other 30% *is a law governing your behavior"--not a choice
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Replying to @InertialObservr @cenobyte3
Well, if the universe is truly deterministic, then you can’t speak of n percent probability (unless n is 100) if you have all the relevant information needed for a specific event. There would be no uncertainty in my prediction (if the universe is deterministic).
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Replying to @HerbertHitchens @cenobyte3
There would have to be a quantum uncertainty, not classical uncertainty
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Replying to @InertialObservr @cenobyte3
That’s why I said “If the universe is truly deterministic.”. If there are quantum limitations, I suppose that wouldn’t be the case.
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Replying to @HerbertHitchens @cenobyte3
Also the existence of free will seems to be a huge asymmetry in the human-universe system, unless you're a panpsychist
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Replying to @InertialObservr @HerbertHitchens
Like the asymmetry of time?
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Worse! haha time is homogenous at least in one direction. To say that free will exists but only in humans would say that there are these many localized pockets in which causality as we know it breaks down
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Replying to @InertialObservr @HerbertHitchens
Agreed ..humans are nothing special per the laws of physics.
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