Mike Nobody wrote:The fact that abstract thought and free will exist makes them self-evident: They exist. They are real… at least as well as we can judge reality. How that contradicts nature, I don’t know how you come to that conclusion.
You still don’t understand the argument. If Natural Law theory really did apply as the sole explanation for how we think, then we would not have freedom of thought. The Laws of nature would prevent it – in fact, everything we did would be pre-determined by these laws. The conclusion you should be coming to is that Natural Law theory couldn’t be the explanation for knowledge and free will. The limitations it puts on you via physical laws does not square with the reality that we DO in fact have free will.
Perhaps an analogy : pretend there’s a theory that says computers don’t exist, and then you use a computer to type up your argument. Your actions prove your theory is wrong. The same with Natural Law theory. The fact that you decided to reply, and took control over your environment to do so, disproves Natural Law theory as an explanation for the reality we experience - well, that is unless you believe you had no choice in the matter because the Laws that govern your body made you do it

Mike Nobody wrote:Human beings are a bit more complicated than an atom, and that’s saying a lot in itself.
A human being is composed of atoms. Just because they are flying in tight formation doesn’t mean that they somehow escape the Laws of Nature individually.
Mike Nobody wrote:Our minds are built into ours, at least optimally. Physical deformity and mental illness notwithstanding. I think some of the thalidomide babies were born without physical brains in their skulls.
So you’re saying our mind is more than physical? Perhaps there’s a spiritual element to it? If so, I’d wholeheartedly agree.
Mike Nobody wrote:You make some invalid assumptions and leaps in logic. You are describing it as though either of have a full understanding of the mechanics involved. Neither of us do. I’m not a neurosurgeon and am pretty sure you’re not. Freedom of thought isn’t an absolute either. The human mind does have limitations imposed on it by biology. We don’t have telepathy, telekinesis, or omniscience. Intelligence, temperament, memory, and other factors vary from person to person.
I’m not concerned with the mechanics – I’m concerned about the implications of the theory that says our experience is solely the result of Natural Law theory. It seems pretty straight forward to scientists that the brain is a combination of electo-chemical reactions – bio based tissue. Bio is governed by the Laws of physics, at least according to the theories materialists and Natural Law theorists have propounded. As such, Laws are unchanging by definition, so all the components that make up the brain are governed by non-changing laws. So the question is pretty straight forward – doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that the theory would apply to the brain, and the concept of free-will doesn’t comport with this theory.
Mike Nobody wrote:Your assumption that free will is negated by nature doesn’t make sense. It is an absolutist position that oversimplifies things.
So where does free will come from then, if all we are is a bag of atoms? There’s a leap of faith to presume that just because they’re flying closely together, they can somehow self-realize, form opinions and take control over other fellow atoms in a non-Natural Law fashion. Don'cha think?
Mike Nobody wrote:SirJamsalot wrote:Gordon Smith never answered this question because he had no answer.
As he said, the question was nonsensical. Greg Bahnsen constantly plugged God into any answer that should have been, “I don’t know.”
The question is not non-sensical at all. In fact, he (Dr. Smith) attempted to answer it, which means he understood the question enough to form an attempted answer, but his answer begged the question.
The question is this: if the world we live in is material only, and material is governed only by Laws, then certainly people who are made of material only (in this view) are also governed by these laws. On what justification to you lean to say that people (sacks of atoms) are exempt from the Laws of Nature in such away that they can free-will away from these Laws of Nature?
