Looking over my life, it seems that choice is like driving a car. As you are doing it, you know you are the one in control. Nonetheless, maybe as a decision is in the process of unfolding, the will is really going to fast for the agent to be in control. The agent, so to speak, is swept away with his will but believes he is in control. Wouldn't that mean we live under a huge illusion all the time though? — Gregory
When it comes to children, the West through the Christian religion traditionally said that the faculty of free will comes about at age 7. — Gregory
On this thread I thought people talk about their experiences with freedoms and why they do or do not believe it is an illusion. — Gregory
But the Jesuits knew that you need to grab a child young, indoctrinate the desired thought habits, the automatisms, before they become too capable of instead thinking for themselves. — apokrisis
Yes. In my musings on the topic of FreeWill, I like to use an analogy with Evolution. Many scientists seem to think of the Evolutionary process as completely random. But total randomness would be Chaos, not the organized system we see around us. It's true that mutations and such are random, but Natural Selection is what "chooses" the next generation from among the options available. In that case Cause & Effect is not just a series of deterministic accidents, but the step-by-step construction --- from inorganic materials --- of a universe that is like a living organism. So the "Selector" is like a fishnet, it doesn't create the varieties of fish, but it's a negative Cause of what "shall not pass". Therefore, one of the two determinants of evolutionary direction is the Natural Selection evaluation of fitness (weeding out) : an algorithm that decides how big to make the holes in the net. Only Moral Agents, with the rare ability of Rational Choice, can decide to fight Fate. I call it "Freedom Within Determinism".Or is it a combination of causality and randomness? — Philosophim
Wouldn't that mean we live under a huge illusion all the time though? — Gregory
That was not the point. Of course, mainstream Chaos theory asserts that there are orderly patterns within disorderly systems. It's what they call Deterministic Chaos. And the same principle applies to Evolution. But, in their writings on Evolution, atheist scientists tend to emphasize its randomness to avoid any implications of intention or design behind the evolutionary algorithm. They de-emphasize the onward & upward direction of evolutionary progress, because it sounds too much like a goal-directed process. :smile:I'm not sure many scientists think anything is completely without order, or they wouldn't be obsessed with demonstrating order in what seems at first chaotic. — whollyrolling
That question was discussed in the blog post and article below.And how can choice be related to a thing called 'free will' while we undergo automatous physical processes in our brain prior to thinking something? — whollyrolling
But I think Michael Shermer made a pragmatic point : accepting that Neuroscience has revealed that even the behavior of rational humans is motivated primarily by emotional subconscious processes. — Gnomon
Psychasthenia can especially make free will hard to understand — Gregory
Good point! I suspect that most of our behavior is habitual and subconscious. So we exercise our "FreeWill" by attending to the proposed actions, and evaluating their consequences based on past experience. The evaluating module of the mind may be what we call "Character", which is also mostly a habit of making good choices. Those virtuous habits (distinguishing good from bad) are learned in advance to be ready at a moments notice. So, the overriding veto is almost instantaneous, and barely conscious. Then, we can construct more elaborate reasons for our behavior after the fact. :smile:More correct is that it reveals that habit can be overridden by attention. — apokrisis
So, the overriding veto is almost instantaneous, and barely conscious. Then, we can construct more elaborate reasons for our behavior after the fact. — Gnomon
If you are really interested in navel-gazing, without becoming a Buddhist or Hindu, you might enjoy Robert Wright's book, Why Buddhism Is True. Don't let the title throw you. The book is not about Buddhism, but about self-knowledge & self-control. And he examines a variety of traditional methods in the light of modern Psychology, and Evolutionary theory.Sometimes I will lie down and just stare at a wall for about an hour. I think it's a mixture of mulling and focusing, but a yoga instructor friend told me once it is not meditation.I really don't know what meditation is then, what the difference between self-hypnosis and meditation is, and how these types of things relate to understanding oneself and one's own free faculty. — Gregory
I agree, but you missed the point. I was not equating Science and Atheism. I was simply making allowances for Theist scientists, such as Francis Collins. But those who are indeed Atheists are the ones who tend to discount evidence of design in Evolution. I suspect that Molecular Geneticist Collins would have a different opinion. My point was that some scientists do see Natural Selection as an intentional device for directing Evolution.There's no such thing as an "Atheist Scientist". If someone is attempting science yet involving gods or no gods in their work, then they're not doing their job properly. Someone may or may not believe in gods, and also someone may or may not be a scientist, but the two are in no way connected. — whollyrolling
So you don't accept information from people who make it their business to know these things? Do you accept ideas from the non-expert laymen on this blog? If not, why bother to post here? Would it matter if I said the same thing in my own words, right there in the forum reply --- just for your convenience? :cool:It doesn't matter to me what blog post said what.I'm not here to go fetch info from some blog. — whollyrolling
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