Danik wrote:The argument I make is that it is empirically impossible to prove 'free will' exists or that it does not exist. Thus belief, or non-belief, in the concept is largely conditioned by other beliefs we may hold. I made no claim as to the accuracy or provability of those beliefs, just their likely effect upon the believer. Personally, I see 'free will' much the same as I see 'deities' : their presence cant be proved, their absence likewise. Might as well toss a coin and go with that decision on it.
There is a name for those kind of statements, that you can't prove something doesn't exist, so it does exist, since one thing can only have, exist or not exist, but since you can't prove it doesn't exist, so it does. I forgot what was the name for those statements, but, I can prove that free will doesn't exist cus we already understand and knew that all our actions are just chemical reactions in a chained reaction that produce said, actions.