Byblos wrote:
Using the same reasoning, we can deduce not only do we not have free will but neither do we have reliable cognitive faculties with which to process logic and reasoning since we did not start out with them (or end up with them if working backwards). Similarly, an acorn or an apple seed could not possibly produce an oak tree or an apple tree because they did not start out with them.
Nils wrote:What I say, Byblos, is that what we are and do depend on heritage and environment only. That doesn’t exclude that the abilities to have cognitive faculties or the predispositions to become an oak are written in the genes.
But that's just an arbitrary choice you're making to exclude free will from heritage and environment and yet include reliable cognitive faculties. After all, no new born demonstrates reliable cognitive faculties nor do they display free will. So why the arbitrary inclusion of one and the exclusion of the other?
Byblos wrote:
Your reasoning is faulty because first, you erroneously assume a living human being does not start with free will (says who?),
Nils wrote:I think that we inherit the faculty to deliberate and choose, that these features are in the genes. If you call that to have free will you use an other definition than I do. I relate free will to be truly deserving blame and praise and I don’t think that we deserve that if we are products of heritage and environment only.
Free will is not just the ability to deliberate and choose but also to be held accountable for one's choices. That you do not consider the latter the same as the former, once again, is an arbitrary decision on your part. Do you consider human beings as rational animals or not? I would presume you do.
Byblos wrote: and second, the reason you make this first faulty assumption is that you are not considering the essence of what it is to be a human being (and more fundamentally the distinction between essence and existence of anything that exists).
Nils wrote:I don’t know or understand how you define “essence” and which is the distinction between it and “existence”, please tell me.
I really think this is the crux of this type of debate, i.e. from which worldview vantage point one is arguing. I subscribe to the natural law and by extension to natural theology and classical theism. In my estimation it is the only worldview that can make sense of EVERYTHING. That's the preamble to saying I'm not sure this thread is the place to discuss such topics but I'll leave it to the Mods to decide if they want to split it.
Before discussing essence and existence, let me ask you this question: do you believe that universals exist? By universals I don't mean propositions (although they could be) but abstract ideas that are shared with common things. Take for example the concept of triangularity. Would you agree with me that triangularity exists whether or not any triangles ever existed?