Oh the free will issue is simply a matter of it being an ill-defined problem. Distinguishing between “choosing” vs “willing” is rather ridiculous: You need “will” to choose, unless the argument is that the sensation of “willing” is an post-generated artifact that causes us to believe that we “willed it”. Which is plausible and also ridiculously shifting things. The notion of turning ANY imagination into PRODUCT is ridiculous; Matter Exists and must be contended with. I mean, how free do people expect their “FREE WILL” to be? It’s not “free wishes” is it? No.

 Oh the free will issue is simply a matter of it being an ill-defined problem.
Distinguishing between “choosing” vs “willing” is rather ridiculous: You need “will” to choose, unless the argument is that the sensation of “willing” is an post-generated artifact that causes us to believe that we “willed it”.
Which is plausible and also ridiculously shifting things.
The notion of turning ANY imagination into PRODUCT is ridiculous; Matter Exists and must be contended with.
I mean, how free do people expect their “FREE WILL” to be? It’s not “free wishes” is it? No.
[responsivevoice_button voice="US English Male"]

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


two × 8 =

Leave a Reply