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Sam Harris on Free Will, Spirituality, and Artificial Intelligence


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2017 Jan 19, 12:33pm   30,889 views  214 comments

by Dan8267   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

Brilliant man. Brilliant video. If I were gay, I'd totally marry Sam Harris.

www.youtube.com/embed/gfpq_CIFDjg

#scitech #politics #religion

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81   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 3:15pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

This is like saying: it doesn't matter that there are high level languages and APIs, all developers should code in machine language because that's all it is eventually.

No, it's not at all like saying that. It is useful to use a high-level language because developer are more productive that way. However, a computer can't do anything with high-level source code that cannot be translated into its machine language. This translation can be done in many sophisticated ways including just-in-time compiling, but ultimately all software has to be executed on your Turing machine as instructions supported by that Turing machine.

Heraclitusstudent says

Well, as human beings, are we living in a world of firing neurons

There is nothing magical about neurons. Yes, they are fascinating devices, but they are not inherently different from traditional digital gates, telephone relays, or mechanical gears. You don't get some magical free will simply because your replace one kind of cog for another. The type of cog doesn't change that what you are going to do tomorrow has already been determined.

Heraclitusstudent says

It doesn't fucking matter that this decision was a deterministic sequence of firing neurons.

It doesn't matter that the decision was made by firing neurons as opposed to mechanical gears. However, the fact that the machinery is deterministic does mean there is no room for free will. Your fate is still predestined. The same internal state and the same external factors results in the same decisions.

[stupid comment limit]

82   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 3:16pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

Which description is the most relevant to our experience of human beings?

I don't care. It has nothing to do with whether or not free will exists.

83   marcus   2017 Jan 27, 3:27pm  

This is an interesting question, but it's clear from this discussion that "what does free will mean?" should be agreed upon first.

Neither question is as trivial to me as some want to make it.

Here are some other questions. What does random mean ? Doesn't random chance affect countless things in our environment which in turn affect everyone's decisions - even if physically we operate in a deterministic way relative to our state at any specific time ?

84   marcus   2017 Jan 27, 3:41pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

But in fact the reverse is true as well: by executing a choice, the conscious layer changes the chain of cause-effects on the physical layer.

Heraclitusstudent makes a good point. For example when Sam Harris decides to spend a month in meditation which probably reconfigures some of the neural pathways or otherwise changes his brain physically (in minute or subtle ways) it's clear that his resolve or will power is a factor in following through with this. This may be largely deterministic at any an point along the way, but who is to say whether his consciousness or even the consciousness of others doesn't impact on his ability to stick to his plan

85   Heraclitusstudent   2017 Jan 27, 5:33pm  

Dan8267 says

Heraclitusstudent says

Which description is the most relevant to our experience of human beings?

I don't care. It has nothing to do with whether or not free will exists.

Since again I already agreed that decisions are taken in a deterministic fashion in my first post, there is not much a discussion on that point. You're not following the plot here.

The question is which description of free will is more relevant to what we experience on a daily basis.

And obviously we don't experience the firing of neurons that leaves us no choice.
Instead we experience a world that we know, in which we anticipate and evaluate alternatives, in which we make choices, and which we execute these choices. This is the freewill people are used to. And it is real enough, in the sense that we do make these choices, and the rhetoric around the theme "we have no choice" is pointed at a different layer than our own experience.

Making choices in a deterministic fashion is not the same as not making choices.

86   Heraclitusstudent   2017 Jan 27, 5:34pm  

Dan8267 says

There is nothing magical about neurons.

No one is arguing that.

87   Heraclitusstudent   2017 Jan 27, 5:43pm  

marcus says

but it's clear from this discussion that "what does free will mean?" should be agreed upon first.

It's clear that Dan calls freewill something that has to be non-deterministic.
It's clear I call freewill the capacity for choice we experience on a daily basis.
We can debate endlessly on which definition is the right one.
The point here is that his definition leads to the belief we are not functionally making and executing choices, when in fact we are.
So what we experience as "our freewill" or "our capacity to choose", whatever you choose to call it, is real enough.

88   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 6:53pm  

marcus says

This is an interesting question, but it's clear from this discussion that "what does free will mean?" should be agreed upon first.

The vocabulary you use is ultimately not important. It has no impact on the subject matter. The definition used in this discussion is what people throughout history meant by the term. I don't care to debate whether or not the term should be redefined for something more useful. I mean to demonstrate that the concept people have been clinging onto for the past 200,000 years is wrong. That is what is important.

marcus says

This may be largely deterministic at any an point along the way, but who is to say whether his consciousness or even the consciousness of others doesn't impact on his ability to stick to his plan

Whether his consciousness or even the consciousness of others impacts on his ability to stick to his plan does not in any way, shape, or form contradict determinism or allow for free will.

89   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 6:56pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

The question is which description of free will is more relevant to what we experience on a daily basis.

Use a new term. The term free will is already taken by a concept hundreds of thousands of years old.

You could call this a cat.

But can you see how it would be confusing and counter-productive to do so?

If you want to define a new concept, assign it a new word. Why deliberately mislead your audience? Why make conversations about your new idea needlessly difficult?

90   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 6:58pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

It's clear I call freewill the capacity for choice we experience on a daily basis.

And volcanoes, rocks, viruses, lizards, and gears meet that definition.

Also, why call that free will when it's deliberately confusing and people are going to think you mean something completely different?

91   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 7:00pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

Dan8267 says

There is nothing magical about neurons.

No one is arguing that.

You are making the argument that somehow decision making by neural networks is materially different than that made by digital gates, gears, genetic code, plate tectonics, thermodynamics, or electrodynamics. That seems damn magical.

92   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 7:06pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

We can debate endlessly on which definition is the right one.

The question is meaningless. There is no such thing as a right definition or a wrong definition. It's the meaning of statements that are either true or false.

The age old concept of free will is incorrect. People believe in it because they are evolved to believe in agents of will and to attribute morality to will. That doesn't mean the actual universe has ever implemented free will. It hasn't.

[stupid comment limit]

93   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 7:09pm  

As for the concept you presented, ill-defined and ill-named as it is, that concept also doesn't hold water as you make an artificial distinction between some physical processes and others. Again, I ask you...

Dan8267 says

Do amebas? If so, then show me the distinction between viruses, which you say don't, and amebas which you say do.

If not, then do earthworms? If so, then show me the distinction between amebas, which you say don't, and earthworms which you say do.

If not, then do flies? If so, then show me the distinction between earthworms, which you say don't, and flies which you say do.

If not, then do lizards? If so, then show me the distinction between flies, which you say don't, and lizards which you say do.

If not, then do dogs? If so, then show me the distinction between lizards, which you say don't, and dogs which you say do.

If not, then do monkeys? If so, then show me the distinction between dogs, which you say don't, and monkeys which you say do.

If not, then do chimps? If so, then show me the distinction between monkeys, which you say don't, and chimps which you say do.

If not, then do humans? If so, then show me the distinction between chimps, which you say don't, and humans which you say do.

If not, then you concede this argument.

These are questions you cannot answer. Anywhere you draw that line will be arbitrary and will cause contradictions. The real answer is that there is no magic line separating any of the above. We are all just atoms doing what atoms do. And quite frankly, if you appreciate atoms and what they do as much as you should, that's plenty spectacular enough. The natural world is beautiful enough as it is. It does not need any supernatural garnishments.

96   marcus   2017 Jan 27, 7:28pm  

Dan8267 says

I mean to demonstrate that the concept people have been clinging onto for the past 200,000 years is wrong. That is what is important.

Okay. But it's not like this is original or that it's a break through. Many great thinkers have said what you are saying, and many great thinkers have disputed it. I'll admit it's an interesting question. I'll also admit that I have trouble with it.

For the sake of being moral and good, doesn't it make sense to believe in free will ? Doesn't believing that we have no free will in some cases allow one to rationalize immoral or unethical behavior ?

97   marcus   2017 Jan 27, 8:01pm  

See Hume and "compatilism."

98   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 8:07pm  

marcus says

But it's not like this is original or that it's a break through. Many great thinkers have said what you are saying, and many great thinkers have disputed it.

I didn't claim to have been the first to say free will does not exist. In fact this thread started with me posting Sam Harris's talk about the subject. I found it interesting and compelling and shared it. When Harris's statements were challenged, I defended them appropriately.

Also, it does not matter how great the thinkers were who advocated the idea of free will. They are still wrong. That is not an opinion. It is a fact.

marcus says

For the sake of being moral and good, doesn't it make sense to believe in free will ?

No, the false belief actually promotes evil. People use the concept of free will to justify inflicting pain and suffering on others who "deserve it". This was discussed in the videos above. The use of punishment by our legal system should only be for deterrent and rehabilitation, if that, and not to inflict suffering on the wicket.

marcus says

Doesn't believing that we have no free will in some cases allow one to rationalize immoral or unethical behavior ?

No.

99   marcus   2017 Jan 27, 8:22pm  

Dan8267 says

No, the false belief actually promotes evil. People use the concept of free will to justify inflicting pain and suffering on others who "deserve it".

I understood Sam Harris' point here, but it's obviously true that one need not totally reject the idea of free will to have understanding of the many preconditions,external and internal causes of bad behavior that should decrease the the idea that one "deserves" punishment as opposed to taking them off the streets to protect the public. WE can view criminals with WAY more understanding of the causes of their behavior without saying free will does not exist.

Even if your argument here held up (which it doesn't), it would be supposing that how society views and treats criminals is the only good versus evil question we confront.

Dan8267 says

That is not an opinion. It is a fact.

Nobody has yet proven it. Hey - maybe you could become the most famous philosopher of the 21st century !!

If you reject Hume, how about Kant ?

https://philosophicalruminations.wordpress.com/2013/01/15/kant-on-free-will-and-determinism/

100   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 8:41pm  

marcus says

it's obviously true that one need not totally reject the idea of free will to have understanding of the many preconditions,external and internal causes of bad behavior

Wrong. In order to understand the universe and everything that happens in it, you must understand natural laws, which leave no room for free will humbug.

If you want to understand how life works, you have to understand the mechanisms of atoms and cells, and you must reject that there is a "life force" that is breathed into inanimate objects to make them living. If you want to understand how sophisticated decision engines like human beings work, you must reject that there is a "free will" that is breathed into inanimate objects to make them capable of choice in a way materially different from apes, monkeys, flies, amoebas, bacteria, viruses, and rocks.

marcus says

Even if your argument here held up(which it doesn't),

Exactly what argument of mine does not hold up and why?

101   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 8:44pm  

marcus says

Dan8267 says

That is not an opinion. It is a fact.

Nobody has yet proven it.

A fact that is not yet proven is still a fact, not an opinion. Why do some people have such difficulty grasping this concept?

The statement "I have a marble in my pocket" is either true or false regardless of whether or not you know the answer. The statement "pistachio ice cream tastes good" is an opinion, neither true nor false, regardless of whether or not you know if I like that flavor. Your knowledge does not affect whether a statement is a fact, a falsehood, or an opinion.

102   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 8:53pm  

marcus says

Hey - maybe you could become the most famous philosopher of the 21st century !!

Who cares? I don't. I care about the truth, not who figures it out or who presents it. The messenger is irrelevant. I've been telling you that for like 8 years now.

marcus says

If you reject Hume, how about Kant ?

I took a test to determine which philosophers were aligned with my beliefs. Here are the results. 100% agreement with Kant before reading any of his stuff.

1. Immanuel Kant (100%)
2. Jean-Paul Sartre (99%)
3. John Stuart Mill (84%)
4. Ayn Rand (73%)
5. Jeremy Bentham (71%)
6. Prescriptivism (64%)
7. Spinoza (60%)
8. Stoics (58%)
9. Epicureans (49%)
10. Aquinas (46%)
11. David Hume (38%)
12. Nietzsche (38%)
13. Aristotle (37%)
14. Plato (34%)
15. Ockham (32%)
16. St. Augustine (29%)
17. Thomas Hobbes (25%)
18. Nel Noddings (24%)
19. Cynics (5%)

Despite a high Ayn Rand score, I disagree with most of her "morality", agreeing only with the idea of objective reality and rationality.

103   931e   2017 Jan 27, 9:06pm  

This universe is much too complex for anybody to deduce much at all.

If you aren't aware of certain information, your entire theories can be pretty far off.

104   marcus   2017 Jan 27, 9:09pm  

Dan8267 says

marcus says

Even if your argument here held up(which it doesn't),

Exactly what argument of mine does not hold up and why?

Dan8267 says

marcus says

For the sake of being moral and good, doesn't it make sense to believe in free will ?

No, the false belief actually promotes evil. People use the concept of free will to justify inflicting pain and suffering on others who "deserve it". This was discussed in the videos above. The use of punishment by our legal system should only be for deterrent and rehabilitation, if that, and not to inflict suffering on the wicket.

You give one example of harm that comes from believing in free will, becasue believing in free will, leads people to suppose that the criminal was fully responsible for his actions. The 2 primary ways this argument fails are:

1) This is only one example of "evil" that can be attributed to believing in free will. It's easy to come up with compelling arguments as to the moral benefits of people taking responsibility for their actions (i.e. believing that they have free will)

2) IT was wrong anyway. Because people "judging" the criminal could learn that most or sometimes even all of the reasons for the criminals behavior are not his fault, without rejecting free will in an absolute way.

105   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 9:14pm  

931e says

This universe is much too complex for anybody to deduce much at all.

Empirically false. Science works. The proof is modern life. Science got us to the moon, allowed us to create the modern world, doubled the human lifespan, made infant mortality almost unheard of.

Feigning ignorance is not humility, and it is not a virtue. One must know what one does know to learn what one does not know.

106   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 9:15pm  

marcus says

You give one example of harm that comes from believing in free will, becasue believing in free will, leads people to suppose that the criminal was fully responsible for his actions.

107   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 9:19pm  

marcus says

You give one example of harm that comes from believing in free will, becasue believing in free will, leads people to suppose that the criminal was fully responsible for his actions.

By the way, FortWayne is a perfect example of this. How could you even doubt that some people believe that "evildoers" should suffer for their crimes? You've argued with Fort Douchebag. You know what he believes.

108   931e   2017 Jan 27, 9:23pm  

"Empirically false. Science works. The proof is modern life. Science got us to the moon, allowed us to create the modern world, doubled the human lifespan, made infant mortality almost unheard of.

Feigning ignorance is not humility, and it is not a virtue. One must know what one does know to learn what one does not know."

You seem to be quite bold in your confidence in your understanding of what "science" has and can accomplish. I like it but its definitely unfounded.

Nobody knows the origin of life or how it all began. Nobody knows why we hallucinate every night as we sleep. Some of these things science cannot and will never prove in a scientific manner.

109   marcus   2017 Jan 27, 9:24pm  

Dan8267 says

How could you even doubt that some people believe that "evildoers" should suffer for their crimes?

How could you possibly think I might possibly doubt that.

Are you not capable of trying to understand what the other person is saying?

110   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 9:35pm  

marcus says

How could you possibly think I might possibly doubt that.

marcus says

You give one example of harm that comes from believing in free will, becasue believing in free will, leads people to suppose that the criminal was fully responsible for his actions. The 2 primary ways this argument fails are:

Sure sounds like you are arguing that the believe in free will doesn't have significant bad consequences.

marcus says

Are you not capable of trying to understand what the other person is saying?

Depends on how articulate they are. My interpretation of what you said was very reasonable. If it's not what you meant, then write more clearly and to the point.

111   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 9:42pm  

Dan8267 says

Science got us to the moon, allowed us to create the modern world, doubled the human lifespan, made infant mortality almost unheard of.

931e says

You seem to be quite bold in your confidence in your understanding of what "science" has and can accomplish. I like it but its definitely unfounded.

One of the advantages of living in the Information Age is that all of mankind's knowledge is at your fingertips including historical knowledge.

https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/apollo/apollo11.html

https://www.mercatornet.com/demography/view/we-have-doubled-the-human-life-span/19067

www.youtube.com/embed/0OtFSDKrq88

112   931e   2017 Jan 27, 9:44pm  

Dan8267 says

Dan8267 says

Science got us to the moon, allowed us to create the modern world, doubled the human lifespan, made infant mortality almost unheard of.

931e says

You seem to be quite bold in your confidence in your understanding of what "science" has and can accomplish. I like it but its definitely unfounded.

One of the advantages of living in the Information Age is that all of mankind's knowledge is at your fingertips including historical knowledge.

https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/apollo/apollo11.html

https://www.mercatornet.com/demography/view/we-have-doubled-the-human-life-sp...

What field of science was utilized to develop the big bang theory?

113   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 9:49pm  

931e says

Nobody knows the origin of life or how it all began.

www.youtube.com/embed/PqPGOhXoprU

www.youtube.com/embed/CJ5jh33OiOA

www.youtube.com/embed/jfq5-i8xoIU

Or if you don't have the attention span to learn the details, here's the executive summary.

www.youtube.com/embed/U6QYDdgP9eg

In any case, even questions that remain unanswered do not detract from the success of science. The honest man simply says, we don't know yet, but we're working on it. Nature does not give up its secrets easily, but if you want to understand nature, science is not only the best way, it is the only way.

114   marcus   2017 Jan 27, 9:53pm  

Dan8267 says

Depends on how articulate they are. My interpretation of what you said was very reasonable. If it's not what you meant, then write more clearly and to the point.

Really ? Not to worry, I'm not going to continue. But this was clear, and already a clarification of what should have been clear in comment 99.

marcus says

You give one example of harm that comes from believing in free will, becasue believing in free will, leads people to suppose that the criminal was fully responsible for his actions. The 2 primary ways this argument fails are:

1) This is only one example of "evil" that can be attributed to believing in free will. It's easy to come up with compelling arguments as to the moral benefits of people taking responsibility for their actions (i.e. believing that they have free will)

2) IT was wrong anyway. Because people "judging" the criminal could learn that most or sometimes even all of the reasons for the criminals behavior are not their fault, without rejecting free will in an absolute way.

115   marcus   2017 Jan 27, 9:54pm  

Dan8267 says

The honest man simply says, we don't know yet

True.

116   931e   2017 Jan 27, 9:57pm  

I like the theory but its simply that... a theory. There is no replicable evidence in the hard traditional scientific sense to support the theory.

Meaning we cannot replicate the creation of the galaxxy and everything in it to provide hard evidence our calculations are correct.

I find it perplexing that we can feel so confident of a theory that is based on an occurrence that took place over 5 billion years ago and billions of miles away. Yet somehow we cannot solve health complications that take place within our own bodies.

Billions of dollars in research & 100s of thousands of the brightest scientists trying to crack cancer but we see similar results to the 1980s still today.

When I look at the whole picture I just feel conpletely silly believing the big bang theory wholeheartedly based on our inability to effectively solve problems much closer to home.

117   931e   2017 Jan 27, 10:41pm  

Dan8267 says

Dan8267 says

Science got us to the moon, allowed us to create the modern world, doubled the human lifespan, made infant mortality almost unheard of.

931e says

You seem to be quite bold in your confidence in your understanding of what "science" has and can accomplish. I like it but its definitely unfounded.

One of the advantages of living in the Information Age is that all of mankind's knowledge is at your fingertips including historical knowledge.

https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/apollo/apollo11.html

https://www.mercatornet.com/demography/view/we-have-doubled-the-human-life-span/19067...

What field of study developed the big bang theory?

118   Dan8267   2017 Jan 27, 11:19pm  

931e says

What field of science was utilized to develop the big bang theory?

Several, most prominently astronomy. What does that have to do with this discussion? And why are you asking me? Do I look like Google?

http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Big_Bang#Origin_of_the_Big_Bang_model

The basis of the Big Bang premise, that the universe had a beginning, was speculated upon for hundreds of years with early astronomers, such as Johannes Kepler, arguing the universe was finite in age. Edgar Allen Poe in 1848 wrote that the Universe was cyclic in nature, expanding and contracting from a single primordial state.[5] Poe also believed that time and space were one, nearly 100 years before Albert Einstein would prove it so. In 1927 Belgian physicist and Catholic priest Georges Lemaître proposed an expanding model of the universe to explain the observed redshifts of spiral nebulae with Edwin Hubble providing the observational evidence of redshifting galaxies in 1929. Einstein, having deliberately implied that there was a Big Bang in his theory of general relativity, proved that the mathematical evidence pointed towards a starting point of time and space. It was Georges Lemaître who was intelligent enough to notice Einstein's implication, and so it was Lemaître who had officially announced the Big Bang model. At the time, however, it was not called "the Big Bang". Lemaître called it his fireworks theory because he envisioned an explosive beginning. The term "Big Bang" did not come about until years later, when it was coined by Fred Hoyle, who was a proponent of the steady state model and used the term "Big Bang," alleged to be in a derogatory sense.

119   9dc9   2017 Jan 28, 7:17am  

Dan8267 says

931e says

What field of science was utilized to develop the big bang theory?

Several, most prominently astronomy. What does that have to do with this discussion? And why are you asking me? Do I look like Google?

http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Big_Bang#Origin_of_the_Big_Bang_model

The basis of the Big Bang premise, that the universe had a beginning, was speculated upon for hundreds of years with early astronomers, such as Johannes Kepler, arguing the universe was finite in age. Edgar Allen Poe in 1848 wrote that the Universe was cyclic in nature, expanding and contracting from a single primordial state.[5] Poe also believed that time and space were one, nearly 100 years before Albert Einstein would prove it so. In 1927 Belgian physicist and Catholic priest Georges...

You eat it up pretty good... hook, line, AND sinker

120   Dan8267   2017 Jan 28, 11:53am  

9dc9 says

You eat it up pretty good... hook, line, AND sinker

Honey, if you think you are successfully trolling, you are even more pathetic than you already look. You have upset no one and accomplished nothing. However, if it is your intent to disrupt this thread, then permaban bitch.

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