I keep repeating the word because that's what everything is. There logically is no way to change the outcome, as the motive of whatever would change it is simply another reaction caused by something else. It essentially is fate.
I don't get what you're saying here, what do you mean there's no way to change it? Change what? If you're on about events of course they can't be changed, but can be chosen, so how is it essentially fate?
I'm not sure why, but you are for some reason assuming a reaction can only be certain things. Our thoughts are reactions to what's going on around us; it's not instinct in the sense that we don't think about it - we do think about it, but our thoughts are simply another reaction with a logical outcome. If we 'change our minds,' that's yet another logical chemical reaction taking place. Our brains' complexions are simply playing out in front of us. The fact that we're able to experience our brains thinking about something doesn't for some reason separate ourselves from the pretty solidly known fact that our thoughts, motives, every step we take and every emotion felt are just a logical chemical reaction taking place. If an entirely identical brain - identical cell-for-cell - were in an absolutely, 100% identical environment, then logically every single thought and motive that occurs would be the exact same.
Okay, Jellyfish have no brains, they only rely on instinct and senses, so how can this argument be justified? Of course they'd be the same in that instance, but that's not reality. And it still would not be fate, just a 100% knowing that that would be because of the given situation.
Why not? I don't agree with the existence of total 'free will' in the first place, but in what way are organisms not just very complicated objects? I was under the assumption that you did not believe in entities.
Hold on just a minute, you cannot state that something is just an advanced version of the other thing, they're complete different things. You're telling me that the metal has a choice in something? I don't think so
Of course they do, just not nearly on the same level. The more developed a brain is, the greater level of consciousness (self-awareness) it perceives. Ants have extraordinarily miniscule brains that are likely only somewhat more complex than a modern, top-of-the-line AI, but it just as well would have some level of awareness. I'm not sure if there's anything specific required for consciousness to exist in the first place as no one really does, but logically, there's nothing separating an ant from a human, an ant from a very well-programmed AI, and an AI from a load of metal.
What you just stated is actually irrelevant, you said it yourself, ants don't share the same level of consciousness as we do, they still make choices however, and even if they're not exactly conscious of making their choices, they still make choices, their instinct and senses play a part.
All I'm implying by 'fate' is that there is one possible outcome within a circumstance. The notion is the technical equivalent to fate, as due to there only being one possible outcome, an observer of the isolated system would see the outcome if it could peer into the future - an observer being something outside our Universe, watching, but not interacting. The moment they interact with anything in or about it, they are then a part of it.
I don't fully understand what you're implying here, but what do you mean there's only one possible outcome? The possibilities of anything are infinite, the only reason you could state that is if you believe in 'time', well it's not only fate I don't believe in but it's time as well. Time only exists as much as length, weight, mass, and other measurements exist, time itself is not real.
I do not believe in future at all, because another point is that if you believe in time, which I assume everyone here does, then you must also believe in fate, I am the only one who believes in neither, I think that there's point going deep into this matter as it's a simple question of free-will to be honest, you seem to be going so deep that the relevance of what you are discussing is steering from fate, this argument could keep going back and forth, when there is but a simple question, do we choose? Of course we do, you're 'reaction only occurs because the circumstance' lecture, I could easily go against a reaction to prove it, just for the sake of it, and then you could state, 'oh, but it was "for the sake of it" that you did that, so my reaction theory is true'
See how there is no answer for this, it just shows that you can't go deep into this, it makes no sense, evidently resulting that fate has no purpose, therefore should not exist, and the same goes for time
Lecture above
It's not as if without fate everything will be frozen, paradox this that and the other, nothing would be in balance, or would it?
We can make our own choices without fate, surely?
You may be able to argue against all my points intellectually, and I accept that, but can you answer me this?
Does fate even have a purpose?
If so care to tell me what it is? Do you even know?!