Maybe it is because I am a scientist type personality that I find the following discussion so discouraging. The recent installment of the culture wars brought another striking example of how lost we as a nation must be. President Biden's Supreme Court nominee was confronted with the question of what was a "woman" according to her understanding. At the risk of being dismissed by many, I am taking a few quotes from a Fox News report. I don't follow Fox at all, but when I googled the exchange between Judge Jackson and Senator Marsha Blackburn, a Fox report popped up first, so being lazy, I just copied the following. "Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, President Biden's Supreme Court nominee, said she was unable to define what a woman is." "Jackson told Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., that she was unable to answer the question because she is "not a biologist." "It is a simple question. What is a woman?" said Blackburn. Now, most p...
The first real question I ever asked myself was whether we actually have free will. Do we have an independent will or are all our choices, actions and thoughts simply controlled by physics? Are we just one complex algorithm? We humans take for granted that others have free will and we generally like to think we are independent agents impacting our world and not just a "very complicated rock." The one glaring exception is when we have a "bad habit" and we blame our upbringing, our circumstances, others, etc. Then it seems our free will isn't so free. Now, this question is so fundamental and so crucial to how we evaluate ourselves and others, how we see history, policies, faith, our actions, etc., one would think that people would be concious of what they believed. But I don't find many who have even asked the question. "Did that psychopath kill those people of his own free will," or "Did he have to because his algorithm make it unavoidable?...
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