Now my question is what does the absence of freedom mean for ethics and how can our actions be judged if we cannot really control them. — Leiton Baynes
I have for now settled with the argument that we cannot control our desires which guide our decisions, thus we are not really free. Now my question is what does the absence of freedom mean for ethics and how can our actions be judged if we cannot really control them. — Leiton Baynes
The Buddha came to the same conclusion. So, he showed people-driven-by-desires, how to break free from the tyranny of evolutionary appetites. Self-control is indeed difficult. But it's not true that we cannot control our urges, it's just that many people don't have the moral character to take charge of their own lives. In that case, they may be acting unethically, not because FreeWill is an illusion, but due to moral weakness. If you'd like to see an alternative view, check-out my reply on the FreeWill thread linked below.I have for now settled with the argument that we cannot control our desires which guide our decisions, thus we are not really free. Now my question is what does the absence of freedom mean for ethics and how can our actions be judged if we cannot really control them. — Leiton Baynes
Argument by assertion. Where's your argument for "we cannot control our desires"? Because behavioral psychology attests that we can. Studies show we can. Children can learn to control their desires/emotions.I have for now settled with the argument that we cannot control our desires which guide our decisions, thus we are not really free. — Leiton Baynes
Repeated assertion. Let's talk first about control of desires before we talk about freedom of the will.Now my question is what does the absence of freedom mean for ethics and how can our actions be judged if we cannot really control them. — Leiton Baynes
thus we are not really free. Now my question is what does the absence of freedom mean for ethics and how can our actions be judged if we cannot really control them. — Leiton Baynes
What is it that motivates them to do so? — Isaac
though I don’t buy the idea that there’s no such thing as human agency. — Olivier5
if it's truly that desires rule our mind and action, then no 'other' motivating factors, no matter how great, would change that. But other factors can and do change the way we behave and think. — Caldwell
How does a 'motivating factor' cause behaviour without a the 'desire' toward a certain response? — Isaac
I don't think "cause" is the right word here. — Caldwell
Well, if you don't think 'cause' is the right word then you've begged the question. You can't genuinely pursue the question of free-will from the presumption that our actions are not 'caused', you've already presumed your conclusion. — Isaac
Sorry for taking a long time to respond.This idea that our instinctive desires are something other from us and 'we' control them are just warmed-over Christian original sin narratives. — Isaac
Do we or do we not have control of our desires. — Caldwell
free will is just an illusion — Leiton Baynes
But then, when I dig deeper and try to see what it is that motivates me to prevent me from eating the chocolate bar, it’s hard to see anything else but just another desire. Perhaps this time there was more rational thought involved in the action, perhaps it was a more long-term desire, e.g. to stay healthy, but it’s hard to see any fundamental differences. — Jarmo
Morality starts off by assuming free will but how it reacts to moral acts is deterministic in nature. You can't have the cake and eat it too, right? — TheMadFool
First, let's hold off on talking about free will here. I'm requesting that someone, anyone respond to the issue of "control of desires". I'm denying that we don't have control of our desires. Do we or do we not have control of our desires. Please answer this.
Good post MF.
Is free will apart from other things then? Where does it reside?
Truly, to conceptualize something as illusory, that something must have some form for us to know what we're talking about. If it is existence we mean by free will, heck a unicorn is understandably conceptually illusory. But free will? — Caldwell
Do you have any ideas where else free will is as critical? If we could get a fix on the provenance of B it'll go a long way in solving the puzzle of free will. — TheMadFool
Now my question is what does the absence of freedom mean for ethics and how can our actions be judged if we cannot really control them. — Leiton Baynes
It is curious that people ask this question about negative actions, actions that harm others. If you save a life, are you responsible for your actions? If you perform an act of kindness are you going to say that you were not responsible? What about your MBA or your Diploma
? — FreeEmotion
Spinoza's rejection of the idea of free will as an agency in the stream of events is at odds with his clear message that we can make things better by being smarter and less arrogant.
Or it is not at odds. Both claims are true. — Valentinus
It isn’t that there are no limitations, but that we don’t feel limited by them. And it isn’t that this freedom is a property of the individual organism, but is exercised in one’s individual awareness, connection and collaboration with reality. Freedom of the will begins as an apperception of variable potential, inspiring imaginable possibilities in these conceptual structures that determine and initiate action. — Possibility
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