 Michael
Michael         
          Barry Etheridge
Barry Etheridge         
          andrewk
andrewk         
          tom
tom         
         As I see it, the compatibilist position is that a person 'could have done otherwise', based on an epistemological interpretation of that phrase and that, since that's the only interpretation that anybody has been able to suggest so far, that's the maximum sort of free will that anybody could imagine. — andrewk
 Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand         
         Are you sure? Compatibilism seems more like "a person is to blame for their choices, even though 'choice' doesn't exist".
"Could have done otherwise" doesn't mean anything under determinism. If "could" refers to anything real, then determinism does not hold at that point - i.e. either the laws of physics are wrong, or our understanding of them. I don't think compatibilists complain too much about physics. — tom
 Michael
Michael         
         Are you sure? Compatibilism seems more like "a person is to blame for their choices, even though 'choice' doesn't exist". — tom
 Barry Etheridge
Barry Etheridge         
         Only if she didn't have the capacity (e.g. being paralyzed by a stroke) or didn't have the opportunity (e.g. because her car had been stolen), or both, do we normally say that she could not have done otherwise. — Pierre-Normand
 tom
tom         
         They would likewise define "choice" in a manner compatible with determinism, and so argue that we do have and make choices. To argue that this isn't what a choice is doesn't make much sense unless "choice" already refers to a real thing, and that the compatabilist's description of this thing is mistaken. But, of course, that would entail that we have and make choices anyway. — Michael
 Michael
Michael         
         Playing word-games to preserve moral responsibility seems utterly futile. — tom
This is what I don't get. Under determinism, what happens is a sensitive function of the initial conditions at the big bang, or if you prefer the conditions at any other time. Choice cannot exist, neither can "testability".
 m-theory
m-theory         
         either the laws of physics are wrong, or our understanding of them. I don't think compatibilists complain too much about physics. — tom
At its core, quantum mechanics can be regarded as a non-classical probability calculus resting upon a non-classical propositional logic.
Defining an appropriate form of determinism for the context of general relativistic physics is extremely difficult, due to both foundational interpretive issues and the plethora of weirdly-shaped space-time models allowed by the theory's field equations.
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
          Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand         
         This is what I don't get. Under determinism, what happens is a sensitive function of the initial conditions at the big bang, or if you prefer the conditions at any other time. Choice cannot exist, neither can "testability". Playing word-games to preserve moral responsibility seems utterly futile. — tom
 mcdoodle
mcdoodle         
          Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand         
         Second, I think 'free will' is an idea unrelated to determinism. Its history is theological and in contemporary debates it remains akin to theology, a way of relating a person's view of psychology to their view of ontology. — mcdoodle
 Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand         
         So even under determinism, one can distinguish having a choice from having no choice. [...]
And what one can distinguish has meaning. My having a determined choice means that my choosing determines the event, and having no choice means that my choosing has no effect. — unenlightened
 mcdoodle
mcdoodle         
         It is a good thing, even when one is a naturalist, that one's philosophy of mind not conflict with one's metaphysics or with one's ontological understanding of living beings. One's desire to avoid such conflicts need not be a covert attempt to save supernatural belief. — Pierre-Normand
 Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand         
         I am an ardent advocate of science as a method and a body of work but against metaphysical naturalism, and I think the two things are confused in determinism/freewill debates. — mcdoodle
 tom
tom         
         How do you get from "what happens is a sensitive function of initial conditions" to "choice cannot exist"? What if the compatabilist defines "choice" in such a way that it, too, is a sensitive function of initial conditions? Then making choices can (and maybe does) occur even if determinism is the case. — Michael
 tom
tom         
         Well not all laws of physics are deterministic. — m-theory
Determinism is often an interpretation more so than a necessary conclusion.
This is especially true of the foundations of quantum theory, which are by definition probabilistic. — m-theory
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
          Barry Etheridge
Barry Etheridge         
          m-theory
m-theory         
         Thermodynamics is not symmetrical.Both General Relativity and the Standard Model are time-symmetric theories. — tom
There is no axiom of free will in qm.At a less prosaic level, the removal of the free will axiom from QM renders all physical theories deterministic. — tom
 andrewk
andrewk         
          tom
tom         
         Thermodynamics is not symmetrical.
Surely you don't intend to suggest that the above listed theories can simply ignore thermodynamics? — m-theory
There is no axiom of free will in qm. — m-theory
 Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand         
         And that is one of the reasons thermodynamics is *not* regarded as a fundamental theory. — tom
 Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand         
         This is nonsense. All of science implicitly assumes the free will of the experimenter. In QM this is made explicit in Bell's Theorem and various similar theorems. Otherwise we are super-determined — tom
 anonymous66
anonymous66         
         Please provide the laws of physics that are non-determinisic. — tom
 anonymous66
anonymous66         
         Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.