>>5932454Oi, I've heard about that experiment as well~
>how that would even matter to the concept of free willYou know, to understand something deeply, one will always end up looking at the smallest of fractions, because that's most likely where all of the reasons come from o/
To see it as a growing up fractal - rule of golden spiral that can be regulated to nearly everything~
Starting from various arts as poetry and fine half-conscious products of that whole free will, then, going by with philosophy, you start to look down into deep abyss. Slowly descending, like on a ladder built by madness itself - the concept - having thousands of dangerous byproducts, outcomes, that can be called as fake, just because of somebody's incomprehention or unknown yet logics.
Anyway - if philosophy's known for theories, it's just as I described it to be - a man, staring down into the abyss. He can't experience anything but has a great overall sight on his goal.
Then, again - by going lower and lower, you are forced to take notice on the details - sets of rungs in the ladder, parts of truth, science, everything you want. A real thing.
And finally - the ladder making concepts. If the image of free will must be studied, it must also be it's path.
I do believe, that as long as it's related to, well - everything we think is right, we can observe it and comprehend - it comes into those smallest of small. Physics, that is o/
Everything and the only things we ever try to comprehend are physics.
Until we won't know other ways of reality, it will be always physics..
^I have no idea if this makes any sense in English, not to mention the meaning itself.
My only defence could be the fact, that I ate too many grapes on a hot day, so forgive me my unexplained blunder.
I'll post it nonetheless even if that would make me look stupid or ignorant towards other ideas - just because I don't feel like wasting it all, lole