Mission

“These are the voyages of the traveler Steven. Its five-year mission: to explore the strange world, to seek out life and civilizations, to boldly go where few men have gone before.”

When I set out to see the world, my goal was to check off a bunch of boxes. I set some goals, got a full-time job, added some more goals, learned that taking 50 vacation days a year was not considered acceptable, figured out how to incorporate all of the goals I set, and had at it. My goal was never to explore new cultures, yet that is what these voyages have become. I have started to understand foreign cultures, but I have learned one fundamental truth. Human beings are, for the most part, the same.

Monday, October 13, 2014

NE/NB/NY - Day 3 - New York

10/13/14
Scarsdale, New York


I’m tired, I’m exhausted, tonight’s entry will be short.  I made no progress on my meditations from last night, and I am prepared to say that, in the end, free will is an irrelevant topic for the philosophers.  Sure, the biologists and neuroscientists and psychologists can debate and research the topic, but, with our present knowledge, there is no point continuing the debate.  If free will is not possible, none of it matters.  Otherwise, free will is possible, and the debate is over.  Until and unless the biologists or neuroscientists or pyschologists have found a way to disprove free will, the proper philosophical answer is to continue to live our lives as if free will is possible.  With that out of the way, I can now move on to recounting the events of today, the adventures that brought me back through New York to my parents house in Scarsdale.

I slept as late as could, until I knew that I could not fall asleep.  I had thought that I was on no set schedule, that I could take my time, that the only variable would be how late I arrived in Scarsdale.  However, I was wrong.  I had forgotten that I wanted to arrive at the State Capitol in Albany before dark.  I got out of bed around 10 AM, having woken up around 9 AM and not being able to get back to sleep.  I probably should have just gotten out of bed when I woke up at 9 AM, that would have given me more of a cushion, but it was what it was.  I had completely forgotten about that variable until it was too late.

I did go to the Frontenac for breakfast, stopping at Parliament for my Official picture along, and I was glad that I didn’t just eat at my hotel, my parents always reminding me how good that buffet was when we went half a lifetime ago.  They had not lost their touch.  It was probably the best breakfast I’ve had in North America, other than some that I’ve had in Manhattan.  The best part was the eggs, they were perfectly cooked French-style scrambled eggs.  When scrambled eggs are prepared right, they are as good as any food.  These were cooked right.

After breakfast, I lit up my Churchill and went to pay homage to the plaque again.  I got some more pictures, not that I didn’t have enough pictures with the plaque from the three other times that I went there.  As I explored a different part of the old city, I realized the time crunch and that I was risking not getting to Albany before sunset.  I found my way to the fortifications and walked back to Rue Saint Louis atop the wall.

I took my traditional picture with the Winston Churchill statue, having him smoke my cigar, getting a kick out of it that I was smoking a Churchill, before walking back to my hotel.  I considered stopping at the Casa in Montreal, but, when I put in the State Capitol into my GPS, it was showing an arrival time mamash at sunset.  There was no time to spare, and I wanted to pick up a bottle of whiskey at the duty free.  I lit up a Gurkha and was on my way.

Due to construction and holiday traffic, I lost even more time.  As I was driving, I saw someone tailgating a gas tanker.  As I approached him, I thought to myself how stupid it would have to be for someone to do that.  Either pass him or keep a safe distance.  Then I saw the car flash its brake lights three times as I went to pass him.  He was obviously warning, about what though?  Was the tanker driving erratically making it unsafe to pass?  Then I saw it, a cop on the median.  I slowed down and, for the second time in two days, I narrowly avoided getting a speeding ticket in Quebec.  I soon made it to the border, not quite having finished my Aging Room, which I ditched in the parking lot, and the lines at Duty Free took far longer than it should have, costing me 5 precious minutes.

When I got back in the car, my arrival time said 6:40 PM.  Nautical twilight began at 6:44 PM (dusk as it’s more commonly called).  I figured that I would make up some time on the road.  By the time I crossed the border, it was now showing 6:50 PM.  When the officer asked me where I was from, I said New York.  He said, “New York’s a big state.”  I did not think that to keep repeating New York until he realized that I meant the City of New York would be conducive to getting to the State Capitol before nautical twilight began.  Instead, I replied by saying “Park Avenue and [my cross street] in Midtown Manhattan.”  “Oh, downstate.”  I set my cruise control for 13 mph above the speed limit.  By simple math, the arrival time should have went down by a minute every 6 minutes.  It was not.  Had my GPS gotten used to me usually driving 13 mph above the speed limit and accounted for that?  Something was definitely off.  I lit up an Opus, and I resigned myself to defeat.

I knew that the Capitol would be well lit and that I could take a good picture of the building.  The photo with would just be shit.  I was right.  I wound up ditching the cigar outside the Capitol, and I got a decent enough picture to say “New York Complete,” adding that it only took 27 years, but I would like to come back to take a more Official picture.  I’m sure I’ll have a chance to stop by Albany at some point in the next three years.  I called my father, telling him I was in Albany and to turn the oven to 200 degrees.  My parents know what that phrase means.  It means that a bucket of wings will be getting delivered within the hour.  I called Candlelight and made it so.

As I was driving away, I realized that I hadn’t realized the significance of that moment, that I finally said “New York Complete.”  Without the daylit picture, it just didn’t feel triumphant.  I stopped at the first service area I found on I-87 and filled up.  I debated if I should take a U or “make it interesting” for the two hours to Scarsdale.  It turned out there was no way to drive from the gas pumps back to the service area, it being one way.  “I guess I’m making it interesting,” I announced as I drove off, putting on Les Miz and lighting up an Avo, a combination I have used to close out so many trips and long drives.

The last song came on as I was pulling into the driveway, and then I heard a crash. 1500 miles of driving with no problem this trip, in addition to the 25,000 or so I had done this year without an accident, only to hit something as I pulled into my parents driveway?  It was just a tree branch that hit the mirror.  I doubt it did any damage.  The wings were ready for me, and I polished off most of the bucket while I chatted and joked with my parents, absolutely starving since I had had nothing since breakfast other than a liter of water and five cigars.  The funniest quote was as follows.  We were discussing the “Ceci n’est pas une pipe” painting.  I said that it was painted by Van Gogh or Cezanne or Picasso, some French guy.  My father replied that they’re all French.  I shot back that Van Gogh was Dutch and Picasso Spanish.  He agreed with that, leaving only Cezanne.  The three of us cracked up for a good minute.

I then had some ice cream and went to weigh in.  Figuring between all the crap I had eaten this week (and the last seven weeks for that matter, since I weighed in Portland), and the pound of wings and the two large glasses of water, I must be well over my most recent weigh-in.  I was wrong, I had stayed at the same weight and will be even lower in the morning.  That also means that I have weighed in lighter than my brother for the first time in probably a decade.  I sat down with my father and chatted some more before I proceeded to write this entry, which I will now close so that I can get some sleep.  In the end, I set out to say NE/NB/NY Complete, and I suppose that I did.  I still don’t have that last stamped brochure from Saugus, I didn’t get my souvenirs in Fredericton, and I need a better picture in front of the Capitol, but I did say NE/NB/NY Complete.  Next stop: Jamaica, man!

Sunday, October 12, 2014

NE/NB/NY - Day 2 - New Brunswick

10/12/14

Quebec, Quebec

Reader, when was the last time that you were so happy that you skipped down the block or danced across the street?  That was mamash what I did this evening as I walked past Parliament from my hotel to the restaurant in Vieux Quebec.  All was well.  I had said “New Brunswick Complete,” and I was in my second favorite city in North America.  New York will always be my favorite place in the world, always.

However, before I recount my adventures in Fredericton and Quebec and the journey between those two provincial capitals, I must continue on from my meditations of yesterday.  I realized that the questions I had asked in the opening were the crux of this argument.  If we are to argue that a dog does not have free will, then I will say that neither do humans.  A dog’s actions are consistent enough that if they do not result from at least some smidgeon of free will, it counters my argument of consistency proving free will.  I have rejected the argument that free will exists because we feel we have free will.  That is a bad argument.  What then about computers?  If you want to argue that a robot cannot be built, whether in a decade or a century or a millennium, that can have free will, then I will argue that neither can humans.  If we are to accept that consciousness is anything other than a gift given by god, we must needs allow that it is something that can be recreated in a machine with sufficient scientific and technological advancement.

I am still no closer to figuring out where I stand on these issues, but I am better understanding the form that my arguments would take.  I repeat, I refuse to allow that free will is only possible for the 7 billion or so human minds on the earth.  I refuse to allow that free will came into being 2 million years ago.  If we are to argue this, then when do humans develop free will?  Does an infant have free will?  A two-year-old?  A five-year-old?  Where do we draw the line?  My argument would be one of scales.  As we reach maturity, we develop more and more free will, just as we evolved more and more free will over the millions of years.  I refuse to allow that it is a black and white thing, that this species has free will and that all others do not, that we develop free will at a certain age and had no free will the day before that.

So, then, what do I say to someone who agrees with me on those aspects? Do I say that I believe free will is possible?  No, I do not say that.  I say that I think it could be possible, that I see no reason to refute it.  When it comes to the existence of god, I have no such doubts.  I say that I believe that god does not exist.  I do not say that I do not believe god exists.  Those are two very different statements.  I guess then, with free will, I would say that I do not believe free that free will is impossible, that I do not believe in hard incompatiblism.  However, I cannot say that I do believe free will is impossible, that I believe in libertarianism.

I only believe in what I can observe with my five senses or deduce through my reasoning mind.  I’m not sure how emotions fit into that mix, since I am not exactly deducing them me my reasoning mind.  I am just observing them.  The same can be said about what we call free will.  However, free will is seen to be an Efficient Cause, while emotions are seen to be a Final Cause.  There is no reason to doubt that my happiness exists, since by feeling it I am experiencing happiness.  I take actions to increase my happiness.  I do not take actions to increase my free will.  I use my free will to increase my happiness.

The answer to this, to be perfectly honest, is that it doesn’t matter.  Short of a proof that free will is impossible, I will not start engaging in hedonism and eschew responsibility for my actions.  I will not start eating boxes of cookies and quarts of ice cream and smoking in the office, saying that it was determined that I would do so.  Even if we had a proof that determinism was true, it would be irrelevant.  If determinism (or hard incompatibilism) is true, there would be no way for me to change my actions.  It is a catch-22.  With that, I will close my mediations for today and pause to fill up another bowl of my pipe.

I had no real schedule for today.  Well, I knew exactly what I wanted to do, but there was no time crunch.  I had a dinner reservation in Quebec at 6:30 PM, which meant that I had to leave Fredericton by 1:30 PM.  All I needed to do in Fredericton was have brunch, have a Cuban, see the Legislative Assembly, and get my souvenirs.  It was the last item that gave me the most trouble.  Without a New Brunswick flag pin, I would have to return when I went to Nova Scotia two summers from now.  There was no way around that.  I slept as late as I could, getting up I think a little past 10 AM Atlantic Time (New Brunswick is an hour ahead of Quebec).  I took my time getting ready and took a shower, and headed down to brunch.  The brunch was disappointing for how much they hyped it up.  In fact, I just hit the breakfast items, not really being in the mood for shrimp and scallops first thing in the morning.  I went back up to the room, got my stuff, and checked out.

I dropped everything off in the car.  It was about a 30-minute walk to the Legislative Assembly, perfect in this crisp fall air.  The timing would be great, too.  I would light up my Churchill, walk to the Legislative Assembly, take my Official picture, oh, wait.  Almost as soon as I lit it up, I realized that Canadian Legislative Assembies don’t get cigars.  I had never established an Official protocol, but US State Capitols most decidedly do not cigars, and I had not had a cigar for my Official picture in front of any Canadian Legislative Assembly.  I had to rearrange the schedule.  I would wander around Fredericton, check out the gift shops, finishing my cigar before I headed to the Legislative Assembly.

As I walked into town, I realized how beautiful a place this was, especially in the fall.  It was like New England on steroids, even more charming and even more beautiful.  I soon got to the heart of downtown Fredericton.  This was where I ran into a problem.  Most of the gift shops were closed on Sunday or closed for the season.  The one place that most definitely sold flag pins was closed for the weekend.  Fredericton is a very small town, about twice the size of Scarsdale, and the tourism season for Canada ended a week ago.  What was I to do?  I asked at the VC, and he told me to check the VC by the Quebec border or the one in Edmundston.  No, that was too far away.  That wouldn’t be Official enough.  Granted, it would be better than no pin, but it wouldn’t be a great option.

I finished my cigar as I headed to the Legislative Assembly, took some perfunctory pictures, but my heart wasn’t in it.  I said, “New Brunswick Complete,” adding that I would probably have to come back.  I headed back along the waterfront trail, which was very scenic with the fall foliage in full bloom.  However, it was not enough.  I thought to myself that I should have just cancelled this whole trip and spent the weekend in the city.  I checked the map as I walked, and I realized that it would only add two hours to stop back in Fredericton as I drove from Miguasha to Halifax when I went in 2016.  I got back to the hotel, and I tried to call the VCs.  No answer.  Was I really going to just wing it and hope that a VC over two hours away would have what I needed?  The one by the border was closed for the season, so I entered the one in Edmundston into the GPS.

Not long after I left Fredericton, I saw the sign for Kings Landing, and the sign showed both a VC and a gift shop.  Sure, why not.  I’d get a funny Game of Thrones picture, and I could take a chance.  It was close enough to Fredericton to be Official.  There was also a gas station nearby, and I needed gas.  I had lit up an Aging Room when I left Fredericton, and most of it was still left, so I parked right out front of the entrance, in the passenger drop-off area, left my cigar in the car, and put my blinkers on.  I asked at the front desk if they had flag pins.  He pointed me to the gift shop.  Could I be so lucky?  I walked in, and I saw one of those spinning racks of keychains.  Those were the only place where they had traditional souvenirs.  There it was!  On the other side of the rack, a New Brunswick flag pin.  I grabbed one and mamash kissed the pin.  I got a few other souvenirs, took some pictures, put my hotel in Quebec in the GPS, and headed to the gas station.  When I got back on the road, I was happy.  All was well.  I said “New Brunswick Complete” again, meaning it this time.

As I drove, I realized that New Brunswick was like a combination of New England and continental Europe.  The highway certainly was, since it had the fall foliage of New England and the driving culture of Europe, which meant that I was able to drive fast, easily breaking 161 just keeping up with the guy in front of me.  My plan was to drive nonstop to my hotel in Quebec.  After I finished the Aging Room, I lit up an ESG.  My next cigar was a Tattoo, which I would wind up ditching outside the hotel.  I made great time on the road, getting to my hotel before sunset, the first time I arrived in Quebec before sunset, this being my third trip here in 2 years.  An interesting thing happened in re: my Quest bars.  I have had three Quest bars this trip, one each day.  Each time I reached blindly into the bag, planning to eat whichever one I grabbed, but thinking to myself which flavor I mamash wanted.  I had 12 bars, 3 each of four different flavors.  Each of the three bars I grabbed happened to be the flavor I mamash wanted.  I calculated that the odds of that happening were 9/440, almost exactly 1 in 49, or about a 2% chance.

Anyway, it was a rather uneventful drive, except for one thing.  With 20 km to my exit off Aut-20, I was keeping pace with the car next to me, us both going about 30 km above the speed limit.  All of the sudden, he started to slow down.  What did he see that I didn’t?  There it was, two cop cars on the side of the road.  I saw them too late and hit the brakes.  Yep, one of them started moving.  I moved to the side of the road.  He put on his sirens.  I slowed down and prepared to face the music.  Wait, he had driven past me.  Was someone else going even faster?  Had I really been so lucky?  I was so lucky.

After I got to my hotel, I checked in, but I got lost looking for my room.  When I finally found it, I was delighted that it had a view of Parliament.  Unfortunately, the windows were bolted shut, so smoking in the room would not be an option.  I got lost again as I tried to find the elevator, even unsuccessfully trying to go out through the exit stairs.  I found a staff member, so I asked him, “How do I get out of here?”  He laughed and asked me where I wanted to go.  I told him the elevator, and he pointed me in the right direction.  As soon as I left the hotel, I realized that Parliament was right across the street.  That was what led me to the scene with which I opened this entry, so I will pause again as I finish my pipe and head back up to my room before I finish my entry.


Besides New York, Scarsdale, parts of White Plains, and a small section of Brookline, Massachusetts, I know Vieux Quebec better than I know anywhere else in the world.  I did not need a map to find the restaurant, I just need to know where on the map the restaurant was.  Rue Saint Louis is nigh as familiar to me as Park Avenue or Crane Road and at least as familiar as Mamaroneck Avenue or Harvard Street.  It was still light enough to take a decent picture in front of Parliament, but I will probably go back to take my Official picture in the morning.  My sheer happiness did not end until I arrived at the restaurant, walking by all the familiar sites, even going through the alley where I had taken my first Official U of 2013.

I will not go into the details of the meal, but it was good even if overpriced and with meager portions.  I pretty much ordered the same thing I got when I went to the French restaurant by Lincoln Center with Aliyah: terrine, a game bird, and a glass of rosé.  After my meal, not liking any dessert options enough to justify either the dollars or the carbs, I lit up a Punch and headed towards the plaque.  I stopped at the first souvenir shop I saw to get a flag pin, a much easier task in Quebec than Fredericton.  Quebec is about 15 times the population of Fredericton and a much more popular tourist destination, so the souvenir shops are open late, even on a Sunday, even this late in the year.  I then went to the gift shop by the plaque, getting a keychain there, not that I don’t have enough keychains from Quebec.

Then it was time to pay homage to the Plaque.  This is, by far, bar none, the most mamash WHS Plaque in the world.  There is even a plaque to the Plaque, it is that mamash.  I knelt in front of the Plaque, paying homage to the Plaque because it properly pays homage to the WHS.  I took some pictures, decent enough in the dark, but I will probably take better ones in the morning.  The great thing about this Plaque is that it is available to the public, 24/7/365.  To see the Plaques for the Statue of Liberty or Independence Hall, you need to go on a tour and only during a certain window of time.  This Plaque is just out in the open for all to enjoy.  Canada knows how to treat their Plaques.

I walked back, and I got a nice t-shirt for myself.  That just left the gift for the one person who will be receiving a present from this trip.  Actually, maybe I’ll get some maple syrup candies for Ryan and Emily at the Duty Free.  I found something for Aliyah, and, when I walked by the register, I saw a cute cashier there.  Well, I found her cute.  I don’t think any of the guys at the cigar store would have found her attractive.  Actually, they probably would have laughed about her as soon as they walked out of the store.  We have very different ideas of aesthetics.  She had a pimply face, but she had a great smile, and there was a je ne sais quoi to her face.  I was reminded of New Year’s Eve 2012 when I convinced myself that I fell in love with a clerk at a souvenir shop, and, when we got back to the room after midnight, mamash toasted, about to pass out, I had told Sokol and Larsen that I was going to move to Quebec and marry her.  They had told me that I would need to learn French, and that was the end of that dream.  Okay, back to the present, I gave her a big smile, and from the way she laughed embarrassedly and started playing with her hair, I knew that I had made her day.

Done with my shopping for the night, I went up the fortifications, also available to the public 24/7/365, for no charge, and explored a little and ditched the cigar before going back down.  I took some more pictures at Parliament and was soon back at my hotel.  I was hungry.  Those meager portions, my Quest bar, and the disappointing brunch buffet were not enough food for me the day.  I wanted a cookie.  I asked at the front desk where I could get a cookie.  The receptionist looked at me like I was crazy.  She said I could ask at the bar for cookies and a glass of milk.  They did not have cookies, but they had an overpriced dessert menu.  I would wait for breakfast.  Hell, I might even go over to the Frontenac for breakfast.  I went up to my room, grabbed my computer and pipe, headed back down, lit up my Ardor on a bench in the driveway, and proceeded to write this entry, which I will now close so that I can get to sleep.

Saturday, October 11, 2014

NE/NB/NY - Day 1 - New England

10/11/14
Fredericton, New Brunswick

The second beer was a mistake, as was getting Romeo y Julieta Churchills instead of Cedros.  Why do I lead with these examples?  Because I made those choices out of my own free will, or did I?  In my previous mediation I established that I believe free will is possible.  However, today I realized two things.  First, if we accept that free will exists, can only humans have free will?  What about a chimp?  A dog?  A bird?  An ant?  Where do we draw the line?  Can we truly allow that free will only came into being about 2 million years ago?  Then, what about the question in the opposite direction?  I’m sure that we could all imagne a robot that was sufficiently advanced that it looked like and functioned like a human being in every respect.  Could such a robot be advanced enough to have free will?  Even if it did, would what we are calling free will be anything other than an illusion that results from its programming, from the RNGs that allow for what we consider to be random choices.

It was from that example that I realized I was one step closer to understanding how determinism could be true even with the lack of randomness.  If our brains are like computers, than we can imagine that are genetic code is the programming.  We have evolved in such a way to minimize the randomness of our decisions, that I that I always get Chinese before I leave because the DNA has programmed me in such a way to minimize the chance of not doing it.  What then is this thing we are calling free will?  Could it simply be nothing more than the awareness felt by our consciousness of the decisions that are the result of our genetic code, decisions that were determined.  To clarify, I do not believe in determinism.  I reject that is utterly false.  Due to quantum mechanics, there must needs be some basic randomness.  What I am considering here would be called “hard incompatibilism,” meaning both determinism is false and that free will is not possible.

By this theory I am positing, we cannot affect the choices we make through our mind, our consciousness only being aware of the process that leads to our actions and falsely believing it could have acted otherwise, though what those decisions will be are not predetermined, since various things could have happened otherwise if the right electron was in the right spot at the right time.  While this theory alleviates some of the arguments I made yesterday, it raises even more questions.  How do we react to stimuli?  Where do emotions play into all of this?  What about people with certain mental disorders?  I think these questions better belong to the biologists and psychologists.  I am neither.  I am a philosopher with a very good understanding of basic physics.

By the time I arrived at Fredericton, I was leaning back towards determinism, or, I suppose I should say hard incompatibilism due to the quantum effect, but I was no closer to coming to any kind of certainty than I was Thursday night.  All I was able to do was come up with a quick rebuttal to those are argue that they know free will is possible because they have felt it.  The answer to that it could be like watching a sports game, it seems like either team can win, that by your cheering, you can influence the outcome, that anything could happen, which is true.  Either team can win, but you cannot control it.  You are merely observing it as it occurs.

The same could be said about free will.  It feels like you have free will, but you are merely observing the decisions that are made as a direct result of your genetic code, the laws of nature, and the particles in your body.  By this theory, I had no choice in whether or not to have that second beer.  If I said, “I had that second beer because I am who I am,” none of my readers would doubt or misunderstood that statement.  Unless I was an alcoholic, my readers, however, would not believe me if I said, “I didn’t have a choice.”

In the end, I made a bad choice, and I did not enjoy my evening as much as I might have otherwise.  It is now well past midnight local time, and I arrived at my hotel four hours ago, yet I am just now getting to write this entry, and my heart is not in it.  Today should have been a great day.  In fact, up until I took my first Official U in New Brunswick, it was a great day.

However, the past 6 hours or so have just been all around shitty for a variety of reasons.  It wasn’t really that anything really bad happened, nothing that would not be fixed by the time I get back to work on Tuesday.  It was just a string of minor disappointments that reached some critical mass and made me feel sad in for as long as I can remember.  Sure, I have felt angry, stressed, disappointed, apathetic, annoyed, even upset, but I cannot remember ever feeling sad like this in quite some time.  I chalked it up to being hungry, knowing that I often feel negative emotions when I haven’t eaten in a while, but the food did not do much to improve my mood.  I suppose I am jumping out of order here, and it makes little sense out of context.  However, I will need to pause before I continue, since my laptop is about to restart itself.


That’s 20 minutes of my life that I’ll never get back.  The disappointments continue to mount.  Okay, so I suppose we should rewind to this morning.  I allowed myself to sleep in, waking up around 9 AM, and I headed down to get the usual Hampton Inn breakfast, a morning start much like any other.  My first stop was to be Portland Head Light, a beautiful lighthouse.  I lit up one of the cigars that Jimmy gave me, allegedly a Partagas, but it didn’t taste right.  I’m pretty sure it was fake.  I know he shafted me with a bunch of fake cigars, but I had thought these were real.  I was wrong.  Either that or his uncle just didn’t know to take care of cigars, which caused them to acquire a funny taste.  Either way, it was a perfectly decent cigar, but it was not the exceptional cigar that a Partagas should be.  I took my pictures at the lighthouse, and I got my souvenir, but my heart wasn’t in it.

I stopped at a cigar store to get some butane, and I picked up a Perdomo, which I lit up right away as I drove.  The second lighthouse was Pemaquid Point Lighthouse.  This was the more significant one, it was the one on the Maine State Quarter, and it was the one that Windows 7 uses as a wallpaper.  However, I couldn’t quite remember the angle for the Windows 7 wallpaper, and I didn’t have cell service.  I got my replica, just as I did at Portland Head Light, and I was on my way.

I was a little behind schedule, and I needed to stop for a lobster roll.  I was looking at a 5:30 PM arrival at the border, which meant that it would be dark if I spent more than an hour at the border.  The lobster roll was great, and I lit up a My Father after I ate it.  My second cigar of the drive was an Aging Room, and I made it to the border at 5:15 PM, enjoying the beautiful fall foliage as I drove.  The search and questioning actually went pretty quickly.  They asked all the usual questions and some unusual ones, but I was honest with them, and there was nothing on me that could have gotten me in trouble, so they sent me on my way.

It was actually before sunset by the time I got to the sign.  There was a path behind the sign that could have served as a hiking trail if I so desired.  I just used it to find a secluded spot to take my first Official U in New Brunswick.  I lit up my Davidoff Colorado and headed to the cigar store in Fredericton, which was disappointing.  Some stuff was decently priced while other stuff was overpriced.  I got a bunch of cigars, including the box of Churchills.  However, this was where I fucked up.

The Churchill is too big of a cigar for the purpose I needed it to serve: my post class discussion with the Ryan and Emily, and the weather is going to start getting too cold to sit in the Citicorp Center and finish the cigar while I write my philosophy.  I guess I should see if I could exchange it for the box of the Cedros, but that would be an even worse decision.  The Cedro is a lesser quality cigar, and it is half the size, but the price is only 20% less or so.  I guess I’ll just stick with the Churchills.  Maybe I have enough of those Andorra Ramon Allones to last the semester.  I’ll have to check when I get back to the office.  I went to the hotel and issues checking in.  I got settled in and went for dinner.

That was when I realized that I was sad.  I quickly told myself that I was just hungry, and I waited for my surf and turf to come.  They gave me a coupon for a free beer at check-in, which I was glad to utilize, but I was very thirsty, so I finished it before my food came.  On top of that, it was from Vancouver.  I was in Fredericton.  I wanted a beer from Fredericton.  I ordered one.  Big mistake.  I am still hungover.  That was four hours ago.  I then got more toasted and chose a few people on Facebook and liked about 50 of their posts each, so that they would have a notification icon that said 50 when they next checked their Facebook.  After my meal, mamash toasted, I went outside a took a selfie with the moon in the background.  I went up to my room and was practically ready to pass out, but I knew that I wanted to get the 10/11 date on the byline, which I couldn’t do if I was asleep after midnight.  I think I might have caught a few minutes of sleep, but I was still sad.  This should have been a great day, all the big things went right, but too many little things went wrong.  That is why I’m sad.  I will be happy when I say “New Brunswick Complete.”  Until then, I close.

Friday, October 10, 2014

NE/NB/NY - Day 0 - Free Will

10/10/14
Portland, Maine


Having exhausted my philosophical musings on love during my previous trip and having come to the realization that the Greeks got it right, that there are four types of love (agape, eros, philia, and storge), and that any discourse that would try to come up with something that explains all four types in one manner is an exercise in futility, I will focus on a new topic for this trip, possibly the single most vexing philosophical topic in all of philosophy: free will.  In order to even begin to have a debate on free will, you have to answer three basic questions.  What is free will?  Does free will exist?  Is free will compatible with determinism?

I was telling Ryan and Emily last night that this was probably the one topic in philosophy where I didn’t know where I stood.  The physicist/engineer in me agrees with Hawking that the brain is made up of particles and that particles is follow the laws of physics so that free will is an illusion.  The philosopher in me disagrees and rejects it as too simplistic that the laws of physics that control the particles in my brain are what prevents me from jumping out of the 27th floor of my office building when I look down out the window.  At work today, I was thinking that there was a better way of looking at it.  Our actions are not random enough for it determinism to be true.  Whenever I leave for a trip, I always go to Hop Won for my last lunch before I leave.  That cannot be attributed to the laws of physics.  It can only be the result of my mind choosing to do it.

As I was driving today, I realized that I might have gotten it wrong there.  Maybe that is just how my brain is wired, to want that kind of consistency.  I’m sure all of my readers at one point in their lives have uttered the phrase, “I am not the kind of person that is capable of X.”  In that case, are you not simply saying, it is determined that I will never do X?  Are you not saying, the way the particles in my brain are wired prevent me from ever doing X?  Is that not a form of determinism?  I’m not going to even explore the quantum aspect of this other than to briefly mention that I considered that consciousness is us simply being aware of the effects of the quantum mechanics of the particles in our brain.  Under that theory, what we call free will would simply be the quantum choices that are made, according the laws of physics.

I rejected that since there is not enough randomness.  Why would I not have a burger lunch before I leave for a trip if quantum mechanics was what was making the decision for me?  It does not make any sense.  How is self-preservation explained by quantum mechanics?  Now, there are many arguments to be made in favor in determinism, and I could argue plenty myself.  However, I refuse to listen to any argument unless said proponent of determinism can first explain to me what consciousness is.  There can be no debate on determinism until that question is answered.  First, explain me to me how the laws of physics and interaction of particles give rise to consciousness.

I understand that is a very dangerous game to play since someone turn the argument around and then ask me how to explain consciousness without the existence of god.  I’m not sure how to answer that.  In fact, I can think of no explanation that allows for both atheism and free will libertarianism.  The only answer I can offer is that just because I am unable to explain it does not mean that it is not true.  It certainly does not offer any evidence to support the tradition Judeo-Christian view of god, but it does lend credence to the Cartesian idea of god.  It is on that note that I will end my meditations for today and move on to the adventures of the day.

I woke up relatively early, but I hadn’t packed last night, and there was so much to do get ready that I wound up being 12 minutes late to work (5, technically, since 9:07 is considered the latest I can arrive without being late).  My pants were not back from the cleaners yet, so I had to scramble to find my old grey suit.  I couldn’t find it.  Eventually, I realized that I had just repurposed that suit into a pair of slacks and a sports coat.  I had been wearing the suit pants all week and that jacket had come back from the cleaners earlier this week.  I was in such a rush that I wound up forgetting two things.  I realized I had forgotten my coat as soon as I walked out the door, but I was already running late, and I didn’t want to turn around.  I figured that I could just tough it out.

It was a busy and funny day at work, and I wound up making up the 15 minutes at the end, staying past our 3:30 PM official closing time.  I got my usual at Hop Won for my pre-departure lunch.  As I was eating and thinking about all the pre-departure lunches I had there, I realized that I had forgotten something else, something that I could just tough out: my passport.  I biked to my apartment, got my passport and coat, and went back to the office, and I finished my day at work, spending too much time joking with Young about cigars before we reviewed the last proposal.  There was a 4:21 PM train and a 4:42 PM train.  I would be taking the 4:42 PM train.  I picked up some Quest bars as I headed to the cigar store, and I bought a few additional cigars to supplement my stash.  I lit up the Tattoo, and finished it with enough time to make the train.

I realized that I had forgotten to transfer my photos to my computer and was stuck with over 1000 photos on my phone and no way of backing them up to anything other than the computer I was bringing with me.  I also forgot to refill my water bottle and my lighter.  I forgot a lot of things today.  The train was crowded, and I transferred my photos to my laptop during the ride.  I got my car, got situated, and got on the road.  I lit up my Nic Toro, which is always my first cigar of the first long drive of my trip, and I soon hit some traffic.  It didn’t matter.  All was well.  I was happy, I was listening to Frozen, and I had my Nic Toro.  After the traffic cleared, I stopped at a Burger King not far off the road, but the drive through line took like 10 minutes.  I ate as I drove, and I lit up my Avo, putting on Les Miz.  After I finished the Avo, I had a Quest bar and lit up a La Duena.

I did not finish that cigar by the time I got to my hotel, but I sat in my car for a minutes and browsed Facebook.  I saw that one of the guys from my Birthright trip had posted that he was eating a restaurant on Fore Street.  My hotel was on Fore Street.  Was it the same Fore Street in Portland?  It was.  I messaged him, but he had already left Portland by the time he saw it.  It was too cold to smoke outside, and I didn’t want to sit in the car for 20 minutes.  I wound up sneaking the cigar up to my room, and I had a smoking room, so that was good.  I took my time getting settled in as I finished the cigar.  I then lit up an Ardor and proceeded to write this entry.  The bowl smoked way to fast, so I refilled it.  The second bowl is smoking slower but still too fast.  It is now 1:30 AM, so I will close.  I can take my time in the morning, but I would like to get a decent night’s sleep.