So you have to endorse that the physical is deterministic and random! That is a contrary position though.This part — flannel jesus
If you don't accept the mind then I am afraid to say that you have to deal with a contrary view you have.This part
I don't feel like going through everything. Most of it. — flannel jesus
I am trying to simplify the conversation as well. You cannot have randomness and determinism within a monistic view since it is incoherent. If you accept the dualistic view then all problems are resolved.But I'm trying to simplify the conservation, because I realise that we'll never have any mutual understanding without starting here: — flannel jesus
Which part of my discussion do you disagree with?we're doomed to talk past each other endlessly as long as we disagree on the determinism/randomness dichotomy. — flannel jesus
Ok mate, let's discuss things to see what is right and wrong in your reasoning. :wink:I'm going to break it down for you. Right or wrong, this is my reasoning: — flannel jesus
You are a compatibilist, so let's just accept that the physical is only deterministic.1. A causally closed system either evolves towards the future deterministically, or it is in some part random. So that's the difference between determinism and indeterminism - indeterminism has some randomness. — flannel jesus
If by the idea you mean free will, then there are other ways to address that without including randomness in a deterministic system. One way to address free will is to consider the mind as the entity that decides.2. Thus any time someone expresses an idea that's supposedly "incompatible with determinism", that's the same thing as saying "this idea requires randomness" — flannel jesus
This I have to explain in more detail. When you freely decide in a situation you don't toss a coin. You just decide and proceed with the option you want. So there is an element of wanting in your decision you cannot deny. I have to say that your decision from the third perspective seems random but from the first perspective, it is not since as I mentioned you do what you want. As I mentioned, if we include the mind in the equation then we have a deterministic part of the system, the so-called body, and we also have the mind that makes decisions when we are faced with options. As I said the decision from the third perspective seems random so you have a part of the person that is deterministic, the body, and a part that seems to work randomly when the person faces options, the other part being the mind. If you exclude the mind then you have a system that sometimes is deterministic and sometimes is random, which is contrary.3. When libertarians say free will is incompatible with determinism, I hear "free will requires randomness" — flannel jesus
I discussed it in good depth in the previous comment.4. I do not believe any coherent concept of free will requires randomness (and that's independent of whether or not I think randomness actually exists), and that's for one simple reason: if something is random, it's uncontrolled. If random stuff is happening in your brain or in your mind or in your agency, you don't control that any more than you control a fully determined brain / mind / agency (and it could be argued that the randomness gives you explicitly less control) — flannel jesus
Free will is real and you can have a coherent picture when you accept the mind otherwise you fall into the trap that a system must be deterministic and random.5. Therefore I believe that the libertarian concept of free will is incorrect (and again, that's independent of whether or not I think randomness actually exists). At this point I can either reframe free will to be more coherent according to my understand, or reject it altogether — flannel jesus
Let me know what you think so far.6. I DID reject it altogether for many years. Perhaps you think that's a more coherent position, and perhaps it is. — flannel jesus
That is all right to change your mind. It occurred to me many times and it still happens to me.7. Some years ago, something flipped, I don't recall what or why, but I came to accept the idea of a compatibilist emergent decision making process. Such a process doesn't rely on randomness (again, regardless of whether randomness actually exists). Through much abstract contemplation, most of which I can't put into words, that ended up with me thinking that some flavour of compatibilism is the right way to think about free will. — flannel jesus
I am not confused. Don't you see that you are having a problem in your position? Being a compatibilist means that one agrees with both free will and determinism and think they are compatable.I don't know what you're confused about. I never said you're a compatibilist. Pull yourself together man. — flannel jesus
How could you be compatibilist and at the same time agnostic about determinism?I'm agnostic about determinism. — flannel jesus
The wave function does not collapse randomly. It just collapses when a measurement is done on the system.The Schrödinger equation evolves the wave function deterministically, and then at some moment it collapses the wave function randomly. — flannel jesus
It is. The cat in the box cannot be in both states of alive and dead.I don't think it's paradoxical. — flannel jesus
It is not at all random. Randomness only exists in other interpretations, Copenhagen interpretation for example.If it's deterministic, it ain't partly random. — javra
If you with quantum crap mean the Copenhagen interpretation then it suffers from many paradoxes such as Schrodinger's cat paradox and particle-wave duality. So this interpretation cannot be the correct interpretation of quantum mechanics.i feel like what I said about quantum crap is a good example, no? — flannel jesus
I think they got it right.Because if I think incompatibilists understood free will incorrectly, — flannel jesus
Why bothering to discuss compatibilism if it does not matter that the world is deterministic or not?because they understand it in such a way that it's incompatible with determinism, then it doesn't matter if I'm a determinist or not, it doesn't matter if the world is determinist or not. — flannel jesus
Where do you think that they got the concept of free will wrong?If they have the wrong concept of free will, then it's wrong, regardless of what I think about determinism or randomness separately. — flannel jesus
Yes.Compatibilism is about conceiving of free will in such a way that it's compatible with determinism — flannel jesus
Well, if you deny determinism then there is nothing to discuss when it comes to compatibilism.which is distinct from an explicit claim that determinism is in fact the case. — flannel jesus
But compatibilism is about the existence of free will in a deterministic world rather than a random world.that's correct — flannel jesus
It is. If you have some other view in your mind please be more specific and use other terminology.Compatibilism isn't a hard commitment to determinism. — flannel jesus
Cool.In trying to stave off potential headaches, he's a compatibilist in the sense of free will being defined as "anything one wills to do that is not obstructed is thereby one's free will" — javra
I think we first have to agree on how options could be real in a determinist world. Once that is established then we could understand that decision is not possible in a deterministic system.which would then be a free will notion that is perfectly compatible with realty being "causally inevitable". — javra
Are you saying that in his opinion the decision is the result of randomness or else is determined? I think we can simply exclude the latter because both options are real. The former also can be excluded as well because of the correlation between the time of decision and action.flannel jesus is of course free to correct or else modify this if wrong. But I've had my headaches in the past in trying to discuss with him the difference between c compatibilism and deterministic compatibilism - which he seems to conflate into the same thing. He sticks to everything necessarily being either "causally inevitable" or else random. And hence to compatibilism only making sense within this framework. — javra
You didn't say that. You said that two options are determined or random. I then mentioned that options cannot be random or determined.asked you if you know why many of us think systems can either be deterministic, or must be in some part random — flannel jesus
What is the thing that you think I didn't understand?you don't understand why people think that — flannel jesus
Options cannot be random or determined. Whether the decision is random or determined is another topic. I however argue that decisions cannot be generally determined since the future as I mentioned is uncertain so you may face a situation with options that you have never experienced in the past. That is where the mind comes into play and gives you the ability to choose between options.Do you know why a lot of us think the two options are determined or random? — flannel jesus
I am asking this question to argue that the mind is not a determined entity. If you have one option, then you just follow it. The future however is uncertain. It might contain options or not. You have to wait for it and see whether you are presented with options.nobody is saying anything like that though. Nobody is saying people decide things before being presented with options. I don't know why that's your question. — flannel jesus
Could you decide before you are presented with options?I don't know why that's a question. The question doesn't connect with anything to me. — flannel jesus
Did you read my explanation? The mind is not determined or random.I don't think so. Whether it's physical or some other substance is just an implementation detail. That other substance faces the same determined/random dichotomy as physics — flannel jesus
