RE: Free will and humans
March 7, 2016 at 6:17 am
(This post was last modified: March 7, 2016 at 6:21 am by ErGingerbreadMandude.)
Your logic is false, I'll tell you why.
You would consider me a person without free will given that I am incapable of throwing a rock that's as heavy as a mountain, correct?
What you seem to be forgetting is the naturally imposed constraints on us such as the physical laws.
Essentially you are saying that a ball inside a fence has no freedom of moment since it can't move *everywhere*.
By that logic, no object in our world has freedom of moment as our world is a closed system(with boundaries,like the ball inside a fence in my example).
What you should be doing is finding an action that cannot be performed even inside the boundaries of the naturally imposed constraints like the physical laws.
(which you won't be able to find, which is why we poses free will)
You would consider me a person without free will given that I am incapable of throwing a rock that's as heavy as a mountain, correct?
What you seem to be forgetting is the naturally imposed constraints on us such as the physical laws.
Essentially you are saying that a ball inside a fence has no freedom of moment since it can't move *everywhere*.
By that logic, no object in our world has freedom of moment as our world is a closed system(with boundaries,like the ball inside a fence in my example).
What you should be doing is finding an action that cannot be performed even inside the boundaries of the naturally imposed constraints like the physical laws.
(which you won't be able to find, which is why we poses free will)