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Free will

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Date Editor Before After
11/20/2013 4:44:27 AMMYrankxponen before revert after revert
11/20/2013 4:43:22 AMMYrankxponen before revert after revert
Before After
1 Hi @[V]sheep, I want to express my opinion on the original premise. 1 Hi @[V]sheep, I want to express my opinion on the original premise.
2 \n 2 \n
3 I think there is no free-will. If free-will meant that we could make decision completely unrelated to what is happening to us and to our mind, then there is NO free-will. Every action have reason, and every reason have past reason, so it is impossible to have free-will. Things don't suddenly happen. 3 I think there is no free-will. If free-will meant that we could make decision completely unrelated to what is happening to us and to our mind, then there is NO free-will. Every action have reason, and every reason have past reason, so it is impossible to have free-will. Things don't suddenly happen.
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5 When we talk about criminal and the law, IMO it change nothing. We always know that stuff happen because of a reason and there's always someone responsible for criminal action (either upstream-source person or unintentionally/side-effect of society). So, IMO it doesn't change anything. 5 When we talk about criminal and the law, IMO it change nothing. We always know that stuff happen because of a reason and there's always someone responsible for criminal action (either upstream-source person or unintentionally/side-effect of society). So, IMO it doesn't change anything.
6 \n 6 \n
7 I believe people acknowledge the existent of free-will because the phenomenon is apparent to our own perception ( we could introspect our mind and test it) . Free-will also make sense because the future doesn't really exist yet, so who knows what going to happen and whether it happen the way we choose it to be, instead it will happen the way it wanted to happen irregardless of us. If free-will meant action & effect have no reason and causes, then being unable to effect an outcome is similar to the universe having a free-will, thus proving the free-will exist. 7 I believe people acknowledge the existent of free-will because the phenomenon is apparent to our own perception ( we could introspect our mind and test it) . Free-will also make sense because the future doesn't really exist yet, so who knows what going to happen and whether it happen the way we choose it to be, instead it will happen the way it wanted to happen irregardless of us. If free-will meant action & effect have no reason and causes, then being unable to effect an outcome is similar to the universe having a free-will ( choice doesn't matter) , thus proving that free-will exist.
8 :P 8 :P