"This is a court of law, young man, not a court of justice."--O. W. HolmesAnyone who think ethics and law are related has never, one imagines, had to deal with the justice system. — StreetlightX
"What are discussions of free will really about?" — Bitter Crank
All I can come up with is limited free will. We can't choose what we want but we can choose how we satisfy our wants. — TheMadFool
So long as people can't wrap their head around the idea that saying "indeterminism is necessary for free will to exist", really means that everything they decide is totally random as a result, we'll continue to have these discussions. — Benkei
The idea that lack of causal determination of actions (by laws of nature and prior events and/or states of affair) entails mere randomness is generally acknowledged as the luck objection to libertarianism. The problem of luck is well known and acknowledged by contemporary incompatibilist libertarians. Robert Kane, for instance, has a fairly sophisticated response to it, which, albeit not being entirely successful, on my view, has some good positive features. — Pierre-Normand
My argument is distinct from the luck argument I guess or Robert Kane misrepresents it in his paper. — Benkei
To base free will on the mere fact that not all processes are predictable is even a worse case of not understanding what we're talking about in my view. — Benkei
My first red flag with Robert Kane is therefore his equivocation of indeterminism and chance. That means he appears to be firmly in the territory of epistemological indeterminism which simply isn't interesting for the reason above. I'll read his full paper later but that's just a first few remarks to clarify my position based on his first two pages. — Benkei
This paper — Benkei
Sure, but who does that? — Pierre-Normand
Most everyone when they think luck and change are relevant. It stems from an inability for most to properly understand QM theories, which, admittedly, I only understand at a limited conceptual level but enough to spot the mistake. Too many think QM theory is an example of ontological indeterminism. It isn't. — Benkei
The question whether QM is fundamentally indeterministic at a fundamental level isn't really relevant to appraising responses to the luck objection to libertarian free will. — Pierre-Normand
As I stated above, the luck objection seems to me different from what I meant and I personally don't find the actual answer all that interesting. — Benkei
What do you think about this? — prothero
I don't quite see how one can consistently hold that view. If there is some generic end that you want to achieve, but that you can achieve in a variety of different ways, then you are going to do it in the way that you want to achieve it (after having pondered over the alternatives ways in which you can achieve it). But then, in that case, by your own premise, you will not be able to chose how (or in what way) to satisfy your generic want either. — Pierre-Normand
However, primordial desire is nebulous, vague. For instance we feel thirst, a generic desire. This initial thirst may then be specifically satisfied with either water, coke, beer, pepsi, etc. Do you think this process from generic desires to specific fulfillment can accommodate some form of freedom of will? — TheMadFool
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