I'm not sure I understand the point of the question you asked at the end of your post — Barondan
I don't think I would be anymore free than I was before they took the doors off. — Barondan
is it possible that quantum mechanics are only seemingly random because of our own ignorance about how things work? — Barondan
There is no way to prove or disprove that life has choice. However, if you believe that you have no choice, then you don't and just let things happen. Believing that you have a choice makers life more interesting. BTW, you do have a choice. — MondoR
Believing that you have a choice makers life more interesting — MondoR
The question of FreeWill came up in a thread on Religious Belief. One common modern "scientific" argument against Freewill in general (not specifically religious choice) is the findings of Benjamin Libet's experiments on voluntary acts. A common interpretation of those results was to conclude that the body had already chosen to act before the mind became conscious of its own intention to act. Hence, "freewill is an illusion". But Libet himself left open the possibility of minimal freedom, in the form of a final conscious Veto of the body's subconscious decision to act. For me, that narrowly-limited-freedom-to-choose is sufficient to validate our intuitive feeling of moral & functional Freedom. It's what I call "FreeWill within Determinism".I wish to see a compelling argument that makes thinking of free will as a possibility without the use of some outside power. — Barondan
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