Maui said:
You've got it vice-versa. If it were so, there would be no reason for the world to behave in a deterministic manner. You don't think the world is obliged to behave according to our models, do you?
The world behaves the way it does. How we can build effective descriptions of it capable of correct predictions, why determinism works, why even mathematics works, is deep down a total mystery to me - and I think to many.
What I meant here is just that determinism is part of our description of the world. But this is just an epistemological subtlety and I probably didn't express it too well. In any case it's not important for my argument.
Maui said:
You seem to make the typical assumption made multiple times in the past - that what is currently known is all that can ever be known.
What exactly of what I wrote gave you that idea? Just to understand.
Where I wrote "known physical laws" you can just substitute it with "physical laws known in a distant future" or "knowable physical laws" or "physical laws known to an omniscient god" and my point will still hold.
Namely, you have to explain how a non physical entity (the self) can interact with the physical world. This was my point.
I think that if you assume it does interact, then you have two possibilities:
1) it exists, it interacts with the physical world, and this interaction can be studied scientifically and tested. In this case, its existence is no less physical than the existence of quarks. It would make no sense to call it a non physical entity.
2) it exists, it interacts with the physical world, but its existence cannot be probed in any way - I mean in any way consistent with physical research, so introspection doesn't count. If this is the case, its interaction will have to break the normal course of physical events, but this interaction cannot be tested in any way, otherwise we fall back to case 1). So you have that when an electron interacts with a positron you can detect the interaction, but when an electron interacts with a self you can't detect it in any way, even though the electron's behaviour is changed. I don't say this is impossible, but is this what you think?
By the way... you didn't answer the question in my previous post.
Maui said:
Be it far from me to say I know everything (see above). But what does this has to do with selves being separate entities or not?