We can, though, say that what did happen, non randomly, trumps as actuality the claims such as "should have", making those to be of a fantasy world stance.
— PoeticUniverse
That seems fine to me. But I would struggle to add: "so there is no choice/decision/other possibility". I think I am viewing these things as existing in reality the same way I view all thoughts as existing in reality. The thoughts are unquestionably part of "reality", even if what is being imagined is not. — ZhouBoTong
random will — khaled
whereas a single particle exhibits a degree of randomness, in systems incorporating millions of particles averaging takes over and, at the high energy limit, the statistical probability of random behaviour approaches zero. In other words, classical mechanics is simply a quantum mechanics of large systems. — PoeticUniverse
Didn't you choose to write those particular words? Were you not free to write something different?I would also challenge someone to define what “free will” is in a way that doesn’t just boil down to “random will” — khaled
Were you not free to write something different? — Relativist
Didn't you choose to write those particular words? — Relativist
But classical mechanics is completely deterministic. So your will is either completely deterministic or completely random. I don’t think that leaves any room for “free”. — khaled
I would also challenge someone to define what “free will” is in a way that doesn’t just boil down to “random will” — khaled
What makes it a freely willed decision is that I made it; I wrote what I wanted to write. — Relativist
What I think is overlooked is the meaning of "the will" - which is that functional component of the mind that makes decisions.. — Relativist
Let’s try an experiment. Think of a city. Now try answering these questions:
Could you have thought of a city you didn’t know?
Could you have thought of a city you knew but didn’t occur to you?
What, in the end, influenced your decision to pick this city among the cities that occurred to you? And if you know, could you have controlled that influence?
Now say we had a truly random city generator generate the name of a city. What do you think the answers to these questions would be for it?
For me the answers are no, no, I don’t know and for the random city generator it would be no, no, I don’t know — khaled
Set aside the issue of whether or not the world is deterministic, and think introspectively about choices you have made. Don't you sometimes ponder and weigh your options, consider the consequences and risks, and ultimately choose what you consider the best, or most desirable, option? I'm arguing that this is what makes it your choice: every factor that led to the decision was within you, part of you. It was driven by your beliefs, your background knowledge, your desires, your idiosyncracies. These are part of what makes you YOU. Determinism doesn't remove YOU from the causal chain.Depends on what you mean by choice. If you just mean “did you pick this option” then obviously yes. But if you mean “did you pick this option because of some capacity you have that doesn’t have the properties of either random or deterministic choice” then No. It wasn’t a choice, it was a random quantum interaction somewhere in my brain that picked this option among many. At least from what we’ve discussed so far, the world is split into random and deterministic interactions. I don’t see room for “free” interactions. — khaled
See my above reply to khaled.It is at this point we should recognise that our freedom to choose or choose from is determined initially by our awareness of information. — Possibility
Of course you could, had it occurred to you to take more time or to use Google. But it hadn't occurred to you. Given exactly the same sequence of thoughts (and identical backgound knowledge, desires, etc), you would have had exactly the same answer. This is true even if Libertarian Free Will were true. If there's a reason for a choice, then that choice is determined. If the choice was made for no reason - that is not an act of willI believe I could have controlled that influence and chosen a different city. — Possibility
Don't you sometimes ponder and weigh your options, consider the consequences and risks, and ultimately choose what you consider the best, or most desirable, option? — Relativist
If you have a child that misbehaves, will you refrain from disciplining the child because you know he didn't really have a choice? — Relativist
If there's a reason for a choice, then that choice is determined. If the choice was made for no reason - that is not an act of will — Relativist
I'm arguing that this is what makes it your choice — Relativist
When you say ‘think of a city’ my mind is filled with a broad range of thoughts: including images, names and rich memories — Possibility
So when you ask your first question, I can think of a number of images of cities that I can’t remember the names of — Possibility
as well as names of cities I know nothing about — Possibility
At your second question, I can think of a number of cities that didn’t occur to me at the time I had chosen — Possibility
And to your fourth question, yes - I believe I could have controlled that influence and chosen a different city. — Possibility
Why didn’t you then? That’s the problem here. You don’t know why you didn’t do you? So your decision to NOT control the impulse as opposed to control it must have been random right? For you don’t know why you made it. — khaled
so you’re saying free will IS just a manifestation of random choice. So if you have a 20% chance of killing someone you’re really annoyed with and an 80% chance of not doing so but the universal die just happened to roll on the 20 and you kill said someone, that was your free choice? — khaled
First you say it’s an influence, then you say it’s an impulse — Possibility
partly at random, partly based on arbitrary significance to me that at the time seemed interesting to run with and helped to narrow the choices. — Possibility
Your experiment seems to be proof that we allow unimportant decisions to be randomly determined. — Possibility
That doesn’t mean we would never know why we made any decision, or that every decision we make is random. — Possibility
If you had said ‘name a city and I’ll fly you there tomorrow” — Possibility
What dynamically biases the possibilities, to a point where eventually it's 100% in favor of a particular possibility (at the moment when you make your choice) is you/your will. — Terrapin Station
Yes but the WAY it does so seems random. Sure it incorporates your beliefs and attitudes etc but whenever a decision is close and you can’t tell exactly way you picked A rather than B that’s just a random choice is it not? — khaled
so a free choice is: the random choice I made? — khaled
so: choice made = free choice? — khaled
It can be, sure. Again, I said, "Some choices are epistemically random, sure." — Terrapin Station
When a choice presents itself, you make it. You say it wasn't "much of a choice", but what you would consider as more of a choice? How would indeterminism change the process or make it more of a choice? You agree that adding some randomness to it wouldn't be an improvement - it would be worse.I wasn’t arguing it wasn’t. Not that I said “no it is not a choice”. Not “no it is not my choice”. The “choice” was made by me certainly but I don’t think it was much of a choice to begin with, that’s what I meant — khaled
What do you call those things you do every day, in which you make a selection from among multiple options? Obviously you are making a choice. Sure, the factors that go into making those choices are determined, but you still go through the process and make the selection based on factors within you. What would indeterminism add to the process that constitutes an improvement?I'm not sure I understand what you're asking, but I wouldn't call something a choice if it's determined. — Terrapin Station
What do you call those things you do every day, in which you make a selection from among multiple options? — Relativist
Sure, the factors that go into making those choices are determined, — Relativist
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