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BernardJOrtcutt t1_j4nsz4g wrote

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BernardJOrtcutt t1_j4nt1ri wrote

Your comment was removed for violating the following rule:

>Read the Post Before You Reply

>Read/watch/listen the posted content, understand and identify the philosophical arguments given, and respond to these substantively. If you have unrelated thoughts or don't wish to read the content, please post your own thread or simply refrain from commenting. Comments which are clearly not in direct response to the posted content may be removed.

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linearmodality t1_j4nvw4h wrote

This article seems incomplete. It does not reference us to any instances of anyone using the "Little Gods" argument except for Sam Harris, and in that case there's no indication of where specifically Harris uses it. It's unclear which versions of free will this argument is valid against. It's not stated how this argument relates to other arguments against free will, or what the counter-arguments might be. It's not even clear where the term "Little Gods Argument" comes from – is it just an invention of the author of this piece, or is it a categorization of arguments that was advanced by some prior work? The overall categorization seems very interesting, but there's nothing in this article that suggests that we're looking at anything more than a single poorly constructed argument vaguely alluded to once by Sam Harris.

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Impossible_Hunter_39 t1_j4pgvph wrote

Free will is the only thing that is yours. They word”my” comes from the Sanskrit word “Maya” which means illusion- that which is not.

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Mustelafan t1_j4t2h14 wrote

>They word”my” comes from the Sanskrit word “Maya”

Source? I'm seeing that the word "my" comes from proto-Germanic mīnaz (meaning "my") which itself comes from proto-Indo-European méynos (also meaning "my"). PIE predates the Sanskrit language so it doesn't seem there's a shared etymology at all.

Which is pretty much what I expected. The idea that a "myself" could exist is a more intuitive and basic assumption than that "myself" is illusionary; it would make no sense for this equally basic word to stem from such a philosophical perspective. Not that English borrows much directly from Sanskrit anyway. It sounds like someone is trying to push the idea that our 'wiser' ancestors 'knew' the self was illusory through this bad folk etymology. On the contrary I'm pretty sure most of our ancestors would've had a very strong sense of self lol

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