I'm just pointing out that the events are not pre-made, already existent or previously carved from either the point of view of temporality or from the point of view of eternity. — Janus
Well said. Freedom is not to be found in the list of a priori conceptions, that from which as you say, the very structure of the world is imposed by the mind. But causality is on the list, alongside possibility, necessity, existence, and so on. — Mww
And while I agree it does not follow from that, that freedom is not real, I hesitate to agree that freedom is still an equally valid way to structure reality, for in which case it would seem to be in direct conflict with that which does so structure, and from which it is itself excluded. — Mww
Nevertheless, because from some P it does not follow that freedom is not real, says nothing about how freedom is real, beyond the mere existence of the conception of it. — Mww
...it would need to be determined what freedom is, in what manner or fashion it is real, in order to establish the equal validity for what it does. — Mww
Could you elaborate on what you mean when you say "freedom?" I want to make sure I understand clearly the basics of the case you are laying out — rlclauer
All my references are to the block universe of eternalism derived from Einstein. I am for fixed will, but fairly trying to find if free will can be; I've only gotten as far as trying to make conscious free will instant and productive and thus not just showing what is past due to figurings having to take time. — PoeticUniverse
But isn't it also the case that the concept of freedom is necessary to arrive at an understanding of the world, or parts of it, since without freedom providing starting points, causal chains run into an infinite regress / first cause problem? — Echarmion
a constituent part of our internal, "actor" perspective. It's necessary for us to make choices. — Echarmion
What I struggle to verify is how that experience claims to be a ‘free’ agent based on what we can measure in time. — Possibility
My view is that subjective experience, and by extension, the will, is not bound or structured by spacetime. — Possibility
So, then, as for free will, I'm figuring that its proponents want to have consciousness to be the cause of what one does, in real time, rather than any subconscious neural brain firings and figurings being already finished by the time their results get into consciousness as a product. (...) Consciousness will have to do it all, as it being the will, and we'll still have to get this conscious will not to be fixed, but to be 'free', providing we can define 'free'. — PoeticUniverse
So, there's not anything left, which means that 'free will' as a stand-alone something cannot be (...), and also that it cannot even be meant, such as the case we have with other words with no context, almost like 'Nothing' or 'Infinite', and although the latter have definitions, the definitions serve to undo the ability of the stand-alone words in themselves to be something extant. So, we have will, its constancy reflecting us and also benefiting us—toward having a future via its predictions. — PoeticUniverse
THEY are the proverbial ghost in the machine. — Mww
The ability of an actor to decide between two or more courses of action, based on that actors internal reasoning.
In presentism, there is only the dynamic now, just generated from the past, with the past then totally gone, and the future not yet created. In eternalism, the future and the past both exist (block universe) and always did. General Relativity suggests the 4D static block universe made of events. We can't tell them apart, so far. — PoeticUniverse
The block universe theory states that time may be considered a forth dimension additional to our three spatial dimensions, therefore the past and future extend from the present moment to their limits or to eternity. In this view the future and past already exist as they will exist and do not change. — Pathogen
That is probably why eternalism is thought in spatial terms as a "block universe". — Janus
Einstein's relativity of simultaneity puts a being dent in presentism's claim that it is 'now' everywhere. — PoeticUniverse
Einstein's relativity of simultaneity puts a being dent in presentism's claim that it is 'now' everywhere. — PoeticUniverse
Eternalism nor presentism serve the purposes of arguing for free will, so the notion of a growing block universe is what were left with. I can't claim to know how time actually works but since choice requires the future to be undetermined or not exist yet feel free to throw any other ideas that would fit the bill my way. — Pathogen
Externally, if one could see it from the outside, which one never can, the block universe is 4 distances with no time or change, — PoeticUniverse
Assuming for the sake of argument that there is "internal deliberation," where does the information come from to initiate the deliberation process? Are there biological factors which influence the mental states, which are a function of brain activity (presumably)? — rlclauer
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