Many neurobiologists conclude from premises X, Y, Z to the conclusion that our will is unfree. But that means that their very argument is based on unfree reasoning, i.e. having no alternatives, undermining any confidence or justification in that process and therefore in the conclusion. If you have no choice what to think it's basically circular reasoning: you can just hope your one way is right, no other chance since no other way. — Pippen
you have the illusion of so,But from your (3) it also follows that you can't control your very argument, so how can you believe in it? That's exactly my problem. — Pippen
Unfree reasoning doesn't entail a conclusion being false, this notion that determinism defeats every action is quite false, it doesn't, you still have the illusion of your own will, — Augustusea
There’s no reason for the will to be an illusion, even in determinism. Determinism and underterminism are both compatible with taking the mind seriously, as an agent. It’s called ‘compatibilism’. — Olivier5
You mention that belief in determinism is self refuting. I don't see it. Your belief is determined, just like anything else. Yes, their argument would be determined. Yes, their conclusion would be determined.
Many neurobiologists conclude from premises X, Y, Z to the conclusion that our will is unfree. But that means that their very argument is based on unfree reasoning, i.e. having no alternatives, undermining any confidence or justification in that process and therefore in the conclusion. If you have no choice what to think it's basically circular reasoning: you can just hope your one way is right, no other chance since no other way. — Pippen
I believe life and consciousness are processes and not something out of the physical world — Augustusea
Consciousness is a process, free will is an illusion. — Augustusea
It doesn’t apply, period. Even a god cannot freely will what he wants to will. But we do have, I believe, the capacity to make choices, with a certain degree of freedom. — Olivier5
the simple explanation is you cannot control your wants therefore you cannot control your doings — Augustusea
In fact,if not for academic philosophy and materialism it would never even be a question. — Asif
but in order to choose you must want to choose,You choose between different wants which have different strengths. Even if compatibilism is true and you choose the strongest want every time, you would still be free — Gregory
but every choice either warrents a want or is influenced by what happened before it — Augustusea
Of course we take into consideration what happened to us before, and what our desires are. That’d be why we have memory and desires, I suppose. To take them into account when making choices. — Olivier5
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