Final-Fan said:
Wait, wait. This is simply the "argument from personal incredulity" fallacy. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argument_from_ignorance What does feeling pain have to do with free will anyway? |
That's how it is. I can't sit and wait for evidence that won't appear in my lifetime. I have to solve these things right here and now, and try to answer questions like if there exists a soul or not. From the evidence we do have I can't see that biology alone explains conciousness. So if we are to make an argument at all on this topic, it must be an 'argument from ignorance' or no argument at all.
I deduct things from each other. Free will is derived from the theory of the mind being partly independent from matter. Pain is a very interesting emotion. I can't imagine a comp feeling pain. I can imagine a comp reacting to potentially harmful stimuli, but I can't imagine a comp experience the feeling of pain.
If I come to the conclusion that a comp can't get a human mind, I deduct from that conclusion that the human mind must have something that is independent from the electrical activity in the neural network.







