Free will would be an illusion. the agent would only be responding according to its program. — Metaphysician Undercover
The point is that I do not accept your argument. You seem to be proceeding from the false assumption that only a self-conscious being can act freely. — Metaphysician Undercover
Does breathing require that one be conscious that one is breathing? Do you see what I mean? — Metaphysician Undercover
Why do you assume that the person must understand what it means to be "choosing", in order to be actually choosing? — Metaphysician Undercover
are you saying that the standard definition/meaning of "free will" does not require an agent? — Sir Philo Sophia
is that a bad example? I mean, are you saying that breathing is an example of carrying out our 'free will'. That example actually makes my point, that is breathing is a pre-programmed part of the agent's system so cannot be part of the agent's free will. If you believe otherwise, please try hard to use your will power to stop breathing for more than 5 (or even 10) minutes and let us know how successful 'you' were at that test of 'free will'. I'm sure you have the 'will power' to do so... If we do not hear back from you anymore then we will assume you were right and you have ‘free will’ the way you say you do. — Sir Philo Sophia
'free will' is not about only about anything that makes a choice. If it were then you can say the Earth is an agent and it has 'free will' to make weather of its choice. If the choices always happens automatically then no 'choice' by an agent is ever made at all. If you disagree with that then everything like inanimate objects have 'free will' according to your (et. al.) definitions and you've thereby reduced the term to be meaningless wrt how it is used for humans. — Sir Philo Sophia
If an automatic response is called a "choice" (and no one in their right mind would call it that), it is not a free choice, because it is necessitated by the thing it is a response to. — Metaphysician Undercover
And once again, the point is that a person does not need to know oneself to be making a free choice in order to actually be making a free choice. So you've just gone off on a tangent here. — Metaphysician Undercover
o, sounds like you do not agree w/ Zelebg that a robot operating 100% deterministic on its program is acting out 'free will' because it actions are necessitated by the thing it is responding to. is that right? — Sir Philo Sophia
So, would you say that human type/level of 'free will' is pretty much equal to the 'free will' of, say, a bee? Why so or why not? — Sir Philo Sophia
So, if you actually consider imagination to be a virtual experience then must it have qualia to render the experience part?
Yes, that is free will, program does what program wants
— Zelebg
so, how can you have a 'will' w/o a sentient agent?
Standard definitions seem to require the "I" be present in the agent. So, my robot example won't cut it, esp. since it cannot ever have the cogito ergo sum dilemma. That is, how can one say it made a willful choice when it does not have self-consciousness to know it is choosing anything? thus, no free will there b/c you don't have a sentient free agent.
your robot is operating 100% deterministic on its program. So, your robot cannot represent or know itself.
an agent can certainly learn and make choices w/o sentience or consciousness, and you seem to be contradicting yourself by saying that the purpose of sentience or consciousness (which the robot doesn't have) is so we can have "free will" (which you said the robot does have)
Don't think that is true. It has been demonstrated that rats have counterfactual reasoning:The difference with human beings is that we have developed our consciousness in a way which aids us in comprehending possibilities, and assessing possible outcomes from our actions. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, why is Zelebg's robot program not able to make a decision on the possibilities which are apparent? Seems to me like every program does that.Free will only requires an agent to make a decision on the possibilities which are apparent. — Metaphysician Undercover
it has been well documented that bees act according to a social program any time they are among other bees so how can you call that 'free will' when their behavior/decisions is completely dictated by the 'will' of the collective at any time dictated by the collective? all social insects likely share the same 'programming'.I would think that a bee does this. — Metaphysician Undercover
, I can also foresee the possible outcomes from my potential choices. This, I think, is where self-consciousness starts to play a role, when I realize that my decisions have consequences. — Metaphysician Undercover
please give us an example of a stable deterministic program which is not constrained to a set of pre-determined behaviors and functions, yet achieves goals and/or has utility.Deterministic program does not equal deterministic function. — Zelebg
how is determinism relevant to "knowing itself"? — Zelebg
your original statement did not qualify it that way or indicate you were talking about 'common wisdom'. So, if you acknowledge that the 'common wisdom' of most all philosophers/thinkers is that the purpose of sentience or consciousness is so we can have "free will", are you just playing with word of "free" separately from the word "will" as a synonym for 'make decisions' to a say computer program is 'free' to 'make decisions' so it the same thing as what humans call their 'free will'. That just seems like word games unless you ground your ideas in the human context and coherently address all my counter examples.In one case I'm talking about 'conscious free will' as most people understand it — Zelebg
Experience is qualia, in that experience consists of one or more different and simultaneous qualities. — Zelebg
“I” is a kind of program. Are you saying your robot can not have “I” or that no robot ever can have it? — Zelebg
Not common wisdom. Common definition of free will. What's this about, can you phrase it as question? — Zelebg
Sure, what do you say is the 'common wisdom' meaning of "free will" and exactly where/how do you reason that is not accurate/true?
I do not. What are we talking about, what is the argument? — Zelebg
I have no idea what are we arguing about or why. — Zelebg
I'm just asking you for a clear definition of 'free will' and for you to compare/contrast that to the 'common definition' you apparently alluded to. If you do not care to do that then I dare say all your opinions on 'free will' are not meant to be taken seriously as they are not open for debate towards a truth, but just to state/spread your position.It's like you want me to argue something I do not care about. — Zelebg
please give us an example of a stable deterministic program which is not constrained to a set of pre-determined behaviors and functions, yet achieves goals and/or has utility.
how is determinism relevant to "knowing itself"?
— Zelebg
would you agree that all true independent agents acting in the world have a goal? would you agree that a more meaningful decision made by an agent when it "knows" that its decision(s) is/are best for its overall goals? would you agree that best overall decisions can only be achieved if the agent has a state of awareness (e.g., conscious) of its totality of needs and if the agent has the ability to realign its behaviors and/or beliefs and/or goals according to the experienced/predicted consequences of its behaviors and/or beliefs and/or goals ? If so, then would you not agree that a conscious agent is exercising more meaningful 'free will' than the automaton programmed agent, and a self-conscious agent exhibiting still more meaningful 'free will' than an only conscious agent?
I'm just asking you for a clear definition of 'free will' and for you to compare/contrast that to the 'common definition' to apparently alluded to. If you do not care to do that then I dare say all your opinions on 'free will' are not meant to be taken seriously as they are not open for debate towards a true, but just to state/spread your position.
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