Instant realization do not change our entire relationship with the world and the knowledge we have about it or the empathy we give to people. It only make us realize, at worse, that we really screwed up, but NEVER will it make someone extremilly dangerous understand entirely the negativity of their actions and make them change instantly
Example: A human with their whole life ahead of them and great plans finds out they are going to die in 1 week. This "sudden" realization, suddenly makes them very detached and cold to the world
No. It would be impossible. I specifically created this scenario in a way that nothing prevents you from pushing the button
The gap between it being very unlikely, and literally impossible, is an infinite gap which through reason you can't identify. Where exactly does it become impossible?
It would be possible only in 4 scenarios:
1. Someone is telling you that you have to let your love one die because it's a necessity for some X reason (let's say to save humanity)
2. If you are secretely loving noone, in which case you could not push the button.
3. You lose your mind for a minute for some X reason and you do not push the button
1. Someone is telling you that you have to let your love one die because it's a necessity for some X reason (let's say to save humanity)
2. If you are secretely loving noone, in which case you could not push the button.
3. You lose your mind for a minute for some X reason and you do not push the button
Inclination is not necessity. The burden of proof is on you to show me where this strong emotional inclination to press the button, ceases being a mere inclination and becomes an innate necessity, akin to how 2 + 2 necessarily equals 4, and is not merely inclined to equal 4.
Nothing about free will implies every choice will be an easy one. Some choices will be easier to make, some harder. Pressing the button is an easy choice to make, and not pressing it would be a very difficult choice to make, but not an impossible one per se
It can't happen like that, I'm sorry. It's physically and materially not possible (at least for rapist, enlavers, torturer and kidnappers, for murderer, I would agree it's possible, but murder is kind of a different thing in term of change as it can be a very non symptomatic behavior but even in their case, there would need to be a form of instant aquirement of knowledge for some to really stick the change, especially the cases where the murder is pushed by the hatred of women or very apathic behavior like that).
But then you list why it's unlikely for a murderer as well, but not impossible.
It sounds like all of these are possible, but some are probabilistically more likely, some less likely
Regret, yes. Really change ? It's another beast
If you want to argue what the odds are that a criminal will change their behavior after the death penalty or some shit, we can debate that instead but I am not going to waste time making conceptual arguments to an empiricist
"After 3 movies".
This is the important part. Change is a journey, it's rarely instant.
This is the important part. Change is a journey, it's rarely instant.
If you want to argue the odds of that, go ahead, but you can't use language like "impossible" and then say it's "rarely" instant, which implies chance is possibility albeit a slight one
Realization : The action of realizing something (most of the time instantly)
Instant Change : The action of being transformed in an instant
Change overtime: The action of being changed over time
Choices : The actions we take because of change
Instant Change : The action of being transformed in an instant
Change overtime: The action of being changed over time
Choices : The actions we take because of change
If you want to argue why that's unlikely, we can go there
What I'm arguing is not if those things are possible or not, but if it is possible to create an instant realization to change those behavior in an instant so those people will not be dangerous anymore.
And this is not possible for extrem change, unless you are ready to induce trauma to those people. They will realize that they did a bad thing, but they will need time to change and fully understand the dangerosity of their behavior.
And this is not possible for extrem change, unless you are ready to induce trauma to those people. They will realize that they did a bad thing, but they will need time to change and fully understand the dangerosity of their behavior.
It is not inherently impossible for extreme change to happen and for trauma to not be incurred, it's just unlikely
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I think you agree about change but that Logiko calls every real element involved in change a materialist thing and Germinator may not see it as something material
He takes an empirical understanding of the will although the will is a conceptual, abstract faculty within humans. It is like trying to solve a mathematical problem using science. Math is conceptual, science is empirical
He says extreme change of will, proved overtime by his improved behavior, cannot possibly occur in a criminal (because it doesn't tend to happen often; an empirical/scientific observation), but pure logic says otherwise as this is a necessary function of the will (conceptual/mathematical understanding of the will)
Rather than trying to solve a math problem (is it possible for criminal to radically change behavior) using science, he should solve the scientific problem (is it LIKELY they will radically change) using science. He could feasibly prove though it's possible for them to change, it is radically unlikely, to which I will wave the flag and not argue anymore as I have not studied the death penalty to that degree
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