Eleven Years of Service
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RE: My take on the free will [Science, Philosophy] 11-01-2013, 08:57 PM
#31
Natural law is very confusing, mind explaining?
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Eleven Years of Service
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RE: My take on the free will [Science, Philosophy] 11-01-2013, 08:57 PM
#32
Natural law is very confusing, mind explaining?
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Twelve Years of Service
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RE: My take on the free will [Science, Philosophy] 11-03-2013, 12:52 AM
#33
@Cyber-Security: I apologize again, I used bad term in the article. It is supposed to be "physical law" that are the laws of the universe that describe how particles interact with each other, form structures and so on, basically how the world we live in "works" :-)
I love creativity and creating, I love science and rational thought, I am an open atheist and avid self-learner.
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Eleven Years of Service
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RE: My take on the free will [Science, Philosophy] 11-06-2013, 02:46 PM
#34
This is really deep thoughts, man. Respect
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Eleven Years of Service
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RE: My take on the free will [Science, Philosophy] 12-05-2013, 02:51 AM
#35
my take on free will involves basically the fact that because every action has an equal and opposite reaction therefore every action is a reaction to another action.
We can predict that when you turn a light switch on the light will come on so if you know the energy and what it is doing you can predict what will happen.
so if you knew all the energy in the universe and what it is doing you can predict what it will do in the future.
Therefore that person would know everything i have done and will do, if that's the case there is no free will.
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Eleven Years of Service
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RE: My take on the free will [Science, Philosophy] 12-05-2013, 02:51 AM
#36
my take on free will involves basically the fact that because every action has an equal and opposite reaction therefore every action is a reaction to another action.
We can predict that when you turn a light switch on the light will come on so if you know the energy and what it is doing you can predict what will happen.
so if you knew all the energy in the universe and what it is doing you can predict what it will do in the future.
Therefore that person would know everything i have done and will do, if that's the case there is no free will.
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Eleven Years of Service
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RE: My take on the free will [Science, Philosophy] 12-05-2013, 04:50 AM
#37
There is simultaneously absolute and no free will. Every choice you make is the choice you were destined to make.
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Eleven Years of Service
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RE: My take on the free will [Science, Philosophy] 12-05-2013, 04:50 AM
#38
There is simultaneously absolute and no free will. Every choice you make is the choice you were destined to make.
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