I don't think Schopenhauer's Will, if I understand it correctly, is something that can be inferred from the fact that we have wants, needs, or desires we try to satisfy. — Ciceronianus the White
And in fact, if we focus on the contexts in which we want something or to do something, we find instances when we can regulate our desire or refrain from indulging it. — Ciceronianus the White
As we have said, the will proclaims itself primarily in the voluntary movements of our own body, as the inmost nature of this body, as that which it is besides being object of perception, idea. For these voluntary movements are nothing else than the visible aspect of the individual acts of will, with which they are directly coincident and identical, and only distinguished through the form of knowledge into which they have passed, and in which alone they can be known, the form of idea.
But these acts of will have always a ground or reason outside themselves in motives. Yet these motives never determine more than what I will at this time, in this [pg 138] place, and under these circumstances, not that I will in general, or what I will in general, that is, the maxims which characterise my volition generally. Therefore the inner nature of my volition cannot be explained from these motives; but they merely determine its manifestation at a given point of time: they are merely the occasion of my will showing itself; but the will itself lies outside the province of the law of motivation, which determines nothing but its appearance at each point of time. It is only under the presupposition of my empirical character that the motive is a sufficient ground of explanation of my action. But if I abstract from my character, and then ask, why, in general, I will this and not that, no answer is possible, because it is only the manifestation of the will that is subject to the principle of sufficient reason, and not the will itself, which in this respect is to be called groundless. — Schopenhauer
he presumes that there is a "Will" distinct from the ordinary "acts of will." — Ciceronianus the White
No, he doesn't. There is only one will that gets broken up into distinct acts by the form of time. The latter (which, being in time, are quasi-representational) are grounded in the former. — Thorongil
Well, he refers to "individual acts of will" which will always have a ground or reason outside themselves, and distinguishes them from what "I will in general"; but fine. It would still seem to me, however, that there is a distinction between the "individual acts of will" and what "I will in general." That distinction, presumably, is wrought by "time." So, what "I will in general" is outside time in some manner, I suppose, though it would seem to me that I am not. — Ciceronianus the White
I rather doubt that there is anything "I will in general" so I don't need to struggle with how that is "groundless" as he says. "The Will" is starting to sound more and more like some kind of supernatural force. — Ciceronianus the White
I'm not sure I understand the force of your seeming criticism here. It's not that esoteric. There's the act of running to the store, running to the finish line, running to get out of the rain, etc, and then there's running in general. We use and understand the language of X qua X all the time — Thorongil
The question I have is: What is it I will in general? I never "run in general" as I when I run I do so for a reason. I know what running is, true; however, I don't maintain that I run in general "outside of time" and for no reason, without any ground. I don't accept the idea of a kind of Platonic Form of running or "to run." Is the Will something similar? — Ciceronianus the White
Will is not simply every action though, but the underlying striving below the surface. It's context in language-dependent and situation-dependent instances are simply minor variations on the same theme. — schopenhauer1
You are eating your own tail here. Schop's (and Kant's) point was you cannot use empiricism to ground empiricism. — schopenhauer1
Is Will akin to the inner "what it's like" aspect of things or is akin to the drive we have to move about to survive and pursue goals in general? — schopenhauer1
I agree with that answer, but I guess now it has turned to this notion (influenced by Wittgenstein) that one cannot even discuss this matter because there is --- "there" there.
Some people in both the idealist and the materialist camp (in much different fashions) want to claim that first person consciousness is an "illusion" of some sort. Is using the term "illusion" just another term for the "mind" and this "illusion" still has to be accounted for or can the concept of illusion have its cake and eat it too? In other words, can illusion really claim that the mind only "feels" like it exists, but does not really and that's the end of the story or does the "feels like" phenomena of illusion still have to be accounted for in some way? — schopenhauer1
No, there is a there, there.
Wtf is happening to these forums that are being invaded by these non dualist parrots? — personalself
Likewise, the mind is simply a name for the many things a brain does and lacks an existence beyond the brain itself. — TheMadFool
"Feels" like it is real is just an underhanded way of saying it seems like it is real, and all we have to go on is how things seem. And it seems a nefarious thing to say to me, that the mind is an illusion. That's something a serial killer would say. — neonspectraltoast
So what is this integrated experience we feel in any given time? If you say "brain states" how are they the same? That's simply the hard question, not necessarily a claim that the mind is illusion, but in the same realm of discourse I guess. — schopenhauer1
As I said, the "integrated experience" is all the brain functions taken together and the word "mind" is just a label, perhaps for convenience of discourse, applied to it but, fortunately or not, the word "mind", the claim goes, doesn't have ontic significance in that it refers to something immaterial that exists apart from the brain. — TheMadFool
What are brain functions taken together then? At some point there is "something" that we currently refer to as mind, and at some point not.. You are simply restating the error with not recognizing the hard problem at this point. — schopenhauer1
What people might mean when they say, "the mind is an illusion", could be when some of us switch meaning 2 for 1: we gather all the abilities of the brain under one banner and we call it "mind" and that's all there is to mind - it's just a convenient label for the myriad things a brain can do but lacks any kind of ontological import at all. — TheMadFool
An illusion is a real thing that is misinterpreted as something else. A mirage is a real thing - a product of the refraction of light and how it is perceived by a brain with light-sensitive sensory organs. The image is then interpreted based on past (stored) experiences. It is incorrectly interpreted as a pool of water because it looks like a stored memory of a pool of water. When you realize that it isn't a pool of water, the perception doesn't disappear into a puff of smoke. It still exists, but is just interpreted differently - as refracting light, not a pool of water. The "illusion" becomes a real effect of real causes and is what one would expect to see give the proper explanation. — Harry Hindu
Mental states are the internal aspect of what is going on in an individual subject. So, if you see an object, it's the feeling, thinking, sensation, and all the subjective things going on with an individual. The brain processes are the neurons firing, the neurotransmitters transporting, electro-chemical reactions happening, synapses, blood supply, etc. etc.
So the hard question of consciousness is not whether or not brain processes cause and are associated with mental states, it is why it is that brain states have mental (subjective "what it's like to feel/think" states) that correlate with the brain states. Thus we have all our theories in Philosophy of Mind...Dualism (there is an irrevocable split in either substance or property between material and mental states), Materialism (everything is just brain states.. and hence mental states have to be explained somehow.. here is the "illusion" idea coming from people like Dennett), and Pansychism (somehow physical reality has a mental aspect to it). The problem is much more complicated than you are making it seem.
The problem with the Materialist conceptions is they keep pointing back to the brain states, but never quite figure out how mental states are brain states. Why would materials like neurons and chemicals have mental properties ("what it feels like" internal states)? The problem here is they will then make the move to say that mind "emerges" from material events. Again, what exactly then is "emerging"? This "feels like" is not the same as neurons, materials, chemicals, etc. If you just make the move from processes of the physical to mind without that explanatory gap being explained, you still have not explained the very thing that needs to be explained. You are making an illegal move, declaring "checkmate!" without actually doing so. — schopenhauer1
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