You made the Republican mistake and let someone who had no business steering the ship, who wasn't really concerned with your agenda or welfare, whatever anyone else thought about it, advance her own to disastrous effect.
I see what you did there
You made the Republican mistake and let someone who had no business steering the ship, who wasn't really concerned with your agenda or welfare, whatever anyone else thought about it, advance her own to disastrous effect.
She makes a hard argument. Even if you say as a creature of reason you're free to reject both, she could counter your inclination is also a product of fashioning. :think:
For the record, I disagree. I think one real miracle in being human is that ability to transcend our own explicable natures and make another choice. But it's a darn hard argument to get around.![]()
The closest thing to a secular brand of Calvinism imaginable (that ought to stir feathers).Yep.
Rather, it's the best argument against it. A man reared by reprobates who becomes a moral figure among men isn't the product of his nurturing and there's no gene that we know of that establishes character.Being able to transcend our natures and make another choice is still unavoidably a result of genetics and environment.![]()
I feel a Whole Foods day for ChrysChicken bacon ranch sandwich from 7-11. :chew:
I wonder if Chrys will get a salad?
The closest thing to a secular brand of Calvinism imaginable (that ought to stir feathers).
Rather, it's the best argument against it. A man reared by reprobates who becomes a moral figure among men isn't the product of his nurturing and there's no gene that we know of that establishes character.
sometimes I feel like a nail being hammered -
you could be one of the elect -
well I can't explain why I am being hammered
HA!!
I feel a Whole Foods day for Chrys
Sure. That's why I wrote "a secular brand of Calvinism", but still, depending, a belief in a sort of determined outcome.Actually, the belief could be held with or without a religious support, but it's not Calvinism I'm talking about.
Supra, plus I'd say you might as well throw nurture out with the bath water given nature would determine how you nurture, as arguably. And there goes free will, again.This isn't about whether God already determined your fate, but whether nature and nurture make your decisions for you: that your free will isn't - and can't be - purely free.
Well, I can or I can't, depending on the contextual frame I choose. I'll touch on this more as we move forward.You can't say he's not the product of his environment.
Understood (former student of cultural anthropology, to provide some background). We even study that in educational psychology.Environment (nurture) isn't just the way your parents parented, not at all.
Agreed. Who we are is a remarkably complicated business. But how we choose to see choice is more an article of faith than science...or as much as.There are a myriad of environmental factors to consider: gender, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, country (geography, language, culture, history, etc.), era, neighborhood, schooling, teachers, peers, popular culture (the books you read, the music you listen to) ... the list is endless.
Twin studies are interestingly fertile ground. I think there's a confluence of things, but I also find reason to believe that we can transcend the influence of genetics and environment to a real and important degree, and that is seated in our ability to reason and to follow the dictates of reason against even biological imperatives.There's a lot about genetics we don't know, and there's no clear dividing line in the symbiosis of genetics and environment.
Yet I've known pessimists who were optimists and hard, angry men who were made gentle.Character is something which evolves over time as a result of a growing cognitive awareness of a moral code, experience, maturation... your personality will influence the way you approach moral dilemmas, and your personality arrived with you when you were born.
Try iced tea instead.sometimes I feel like a nail being hammered -
And there goes free will, again.
Agreed. Who we are is a remarkably complicated business. But how we choose to see choice is more an article of faith than science...or as much as.
Twin studies are interestingly fertile ground. I think there's a confluence of things, but I also find reason to believe that we can transcend the influence of genetics and environment to a real and important degree, and that is seated in our ability to reason and to follow the dictates of reason against even biological imperatives.
Life can do that to a person, and it can also accomplish the complete opposite.Yet I've known pessimists who were optimists and hard, angry men who were made gentle.
I think what we might observe in man is, at large, the rule of least resistance with a present exception voiced in a hundred smaller ways, founded in the miracle of our minds and waiting on a larger use.
Lastly, I think I just heard someone with your last name running in the Olympics.
I think you can make it philosophically and religiously too. It's an article of faith.I think an argument could be made for that, yes.
Or it isn't.How we choose to see choice is a combination of nature and nurture.
I really wasn't either, only noting a parallel.I'm not making a religious argument here,
I'd say the good news is that it isn't necessarily true, isn't demonstrably more true than views rejecting it and so isn't a contextual foundation we must begin with...or, as I put it at the outset, an article of faith.but I'd venture to say that for a believer of any faith, that whatever acceptance of grace or similar concept is dependent on the genetic and environment basis for that person's willingness to be open to it.
They're interesting, but inconclusive, agreed. And the wonderful thing about reason is that it can be checked against influence. Proofs, by way of.And yet twin studies are in no way conclusive, and your ability to reason is affected by all the environmental factors I mentioned earlier, coupled with your genetic predisposition.
Or, people can transcend the compulsion of their biology and the expectation of their social order.Life can do that to a person, and it can also accomplish the complete opposite.
Not a problem. We were speaking of character and choice.I have no idea what you just said. Seriously.
Like he has a say in it.Really? I hope he does the name proud. :chuckle:
I think you can make it philosophically and religiously too. It's an article of faith.
Or it isn't.
I really wasn't either, only noting a parallel.
I'd say the good news is that it isn't necessarily true, isn't demonstrably more true than views rejecting it and so isn't a contextual foundation we must begin with...or, as I put it at the outset, an article of faith.
Well, sure. When their genetics intersects with their environment.Or, people can transcend the compulsion of their biology and the expectation of their social order.
Not a problem. We were speaking of character and choice.
"I think what we might observe in man is, at large, the rule of least resistance"
Or, we may typically follow our physical impulses and cultural signposts because it's easier.
"with a present exception voiced in a hundred smaller ways,"
While noting that we make choices contrary to impulse and expectation in any number of lesser ways, that still find us mostly within the norm.
"founded in the miracle of our minds and waiting on a larger use."
But that we have in those small differences, evidence of a larger capacity, waiting only upon our use. We may reject the rule or comply with it.
Because all the willed transcendental character in the world won't get a non-athlete across an Olympic finish line.Like he has a say in it.![]()
No, we're on the same page. That's what I was speaking to as well. :thumb: I think some of Skinner's people make the case and you find a version of it in philosophy as well, though the chief proponent escapes me at present.I'm not sure we're on the same page. I meant there goes free will as in out the window.
No, I was only noting that some views on predetermination paralleled both biological and philosophical arguments against free will, depending on the source.I could be wrong but it seems to me that your underlying aim here is to bring this around to a theological free will
Me either, beyond the note. I think it's interesting though.I didn't mean for this to be an examination of predestination.
I think you're wrong if you're really that locked into a mechanistic world view. I'd say we're greater than either, though influenced by both. Whether or not we take the path of least resistance remains ours, for the most part, in my world view. So I may have the predisposition for alcoholism and my environment may predispose to skepticism, but I can choose to refrain from placing drink in my path and I may choose to follow a different view of ultimate context for decades or for life.Well, sure. When their genetics intersects with their environment.
I don't think of man as particularly heroic. Mostly we're selfish, fearful and under thought. But there are moments when we meet our capacity for more and those moments, bit by bit, elevate and inspire the race.Individuals are not so much the heroes of their narratives as they are the navigators. IMHO.
But without it the line won't really mean much that matters.Because all the willed transcendental character in the world won't get a non-athlete across an Olympic finish line.![]()
Gentle, amiable difference...in TOL...this place must be really going down the tubes.
I see what you did there
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I should report this
Your dashes are slipping.![]()
No, I was only noting that some views on predetermination paralleled both biological and philosophical arguments against free will, depending on the source.
Me either, beyond the note. I think it's interesting though.
I think you're wrong if you're really that locked into a mechanistic world view. I'd say we're greater than either, though influenced by both. Whether or not we take the path of least resistance remains ours, for the most part, in my world view. So I may have the predisposition for alcoholism and my environment may predispose to skepticism, but I can choose to refrain from placing drink in my path and I may choose to follow a different view of ultimate context for decades or for life.
I am experimenting
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with dashes
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format is important