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Religion
In reply to the discussion: Free will and consciousness [View all]struggle4progress
(118,228 posts)19. This smells to me like philosophy in the service of reactionary politics:
"You really don't have a choice anyway -- everybody's actions are all just automatic reactions determined by ambient conditions"
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First of all, the claim that one side has the burden of proof with respect to a phenomenon ...
Jim__
Sep 2016
#4
Where did that thought to raise your arm come from? (pretend you actually had that thought)
cpwm17
Sep 2016
#6
Yes, with brain imaging scientists can study which areas in the brain are involved
cpwm17
Sep 2016
#15
"Johns Hopkins University researchers are the first to glimpse the human brain making a purely ...
Jim__
Sep 2016
#20
The haven't supported free will, as I am using that term, and it's frequently used.
cpwm17
Sep 2016
#25
They are talking about a purely voluntary decision to act. They are calling that free will.
Jim__
Sep 2016
#29
Conscious freedom to choose requires consciousness to be the originator of thoughts.
cpwm17
Sep 2016
#38
Please cite your source for the claim about the most common definition of free will.
Jim__
Sep 2016
#39
The subtle feelings are related to what Antonio Damasio calls background feelings
cpwm17
Sep 2016
#16
Demasio apparently thinks we have free will, though he didn't explain in detail how it works,
cpwm17
Sep 2016
#28
People seem to have a pretty good idea about how to make thoughts "pop into our heads."
Jim__
Sep 2016
#30
As I wrote before, the vast majority of what happens in the brain is outside of consciousness.
cpwm17
Sep 2016
#41
You would have free will if your thoughts and actions originate from consciousness and if you had
cpwm17
Sep 2016
#8
This smells to me like philosophy in the service of reactionary politics:
struggle4progress
Sep 2016
#19