People aren't billiard balls. An influenced or compelled choice is still a choice.1. If not determinism, then what? Randomness, an easy answer, but we don't want that, do we? A between-Scylla-and-Charybdis situation. Is being capable of randomness freedom? — Agent Smith
Certainly, being able to imagine a future seems like a useless adaptation for a choiceless creature.2. Causality-wise, we want not to be effects but we don't mind being causes. In other words, we wish to be outside the casual web but we also want to be able to influence the course of the future. Is this possible? — Agent Smith
It does have to explain what we have done and sometimes we honestly don't know. We have the illusion of an illusion in some sense in order for reality to remain stable.3. Why would the mind create an illusion of freedom if, in fact, we aren't free? — Agent Smith
It's free will in a normal sense. Do you want to decide to breath every ten seconds?5. How appealing is being semi-autonomous? We have free will but only in a limited sense. — Agent Smith
Who other than yourself could make you write the above?6. Do we really want free will? Daoism for example, from a certain angle, seems to be averse to the idea of doing what(ever) we want. Go with the flow is not exactly a call to claim one's freedom. — Agent Smith
meta-physical topics — Gnomon
What caused you to become a compatiblist? Did you have the option to reach a different conclusion? Can you trace an unbroken chain of causation beck to the Big Bang? Or was your own reasoning ability a meta-physical Cause of your decision? FWIW, I am also a compatiblist. However, if we both have free thought, you may not agree with how I arrived at my summation of the pertinent causes of Freedom Within Determinism.Volition is, like every other nonlinear dynamic system, deterministic. (Btw, introspection is illusory, and I am a compatibilist.) So what question/s are you trying to raise with the OP? — 180 Proof
If not determinism, then what? — Agent Smith
magic
a magical invisible soul that can magically create first causes out of its magical invisible spiritual intelligence — Miller
People aren't billiard balls. An influenced or compelled choice is still a choice. — Cheshire
Certainly, being able to imagine a future seems like a useless adaptation for a choiceless creature. — Cheshire
we honestly don't know. — Cheshire
The basis for determinism; such as the planets going around sun. The physical forces are overwhelming enough to rule out alternate paths and the subjects(planets) lack the capacity for agency. It's a deterministic or 'no choice' model.This doesn't make sense to me. What's a no choice scenario then? — Agent Smith
Thanks, I just thought of this one. It is compelling if you accept evolutionary selection as influential enough to demand an explanation. In order to be an advantage the predictor has to 'successfully' make adjustments and not just believe they are making adjustments.Magnifique! Being able to, in a sense, predict the future only makes sense if the predictor means to make adjustments for it. Free will!? — Agent Smith
On occasion we do make choices which are rationalized after the fact. I don't think the whole of determinism is without some rational basis. But, extending the observation to suggest every decision is made and then rationalized over extends the evidence.That's right! "I don't know" is an acceptable response to a query. Me either! However, it would be better if we knew. — Agent Smith
Well, thanks. Arguing for secular free will has never been easy. The belief that freedom implies randomness shuts down the discussion more than often. Or the notion that free will should always be realized as to explain every aspect of one's condition. I acknowledge there are many influences and contextual pressures that drive outcomes, but if they can be understood and accounted for; then these are not proper illusions.↪Cheshire Good responses! — Agent Smith
I go a step further and argue "randomness" is a strawman that disposes of the concept of 'will' for the sake of argument. Fundamentally, the world is probabilistic and negatively determined by what's impossible. If I saw a person acting randomonly I doubt my first impression would be an individual exercising free will.There's something between determinism and randomness. — Agent Smith
I think that's a fair summation that points to a break down in the imaginary casual chain.1. Some things don't have an effect (e.g. me pushing the Eiffel tower won't do jack shit to it!).
Ergo,
2. Some things have no causes. — Agent Smith
Where did I say anything about "metaphysical determinism"? I had never heard that label until you brought it up. Apparently, you are labeling my apples as oranges. . . . Sir. :joke:Deterministic – a non-metaphysical concept which compatibilists assume – does not mean what determinists (or indeterminists) mean bymetaphysical determinism. You're confusing apples with oranges again, sir. — 180 Proof
Context + this:Where did I say anything about "metaphysical determinism"? — Gnomon
:roll:What caused you to become a compatiblist? Did you have the option to reach a different conclusion? Can you trace an unbroken chain of causation beck to the Big Bang? Or was your own reasoning ability a meta-physical Cause of your decision? — Gnomon
A possibility, yes! — Agent Smith
Oh, I see. You put the apple of a FreeWill vs Determinism context together with the mention of a "meta-physical" orange, and concluded "metaphysical determinism". As a Compatiblist myself, I am not a proponent of that particular line of reasoning (see Fatalism below). Instead, I was suggesting that human Reason could be an emergent "meta-physical" (mental not physical) Cause of forging a new link in the physical chain of Causation. The ability to choose between probabilistic options, is a determinant of the subsequent branch of contingent causation. In other words, Reason is your get-out-of-bondage-to-Fate-free-card.Where did I say anything about "metaphysical determinism"? — Gnomon
Context + this:
"What caused you to become a compatiblist? Did you have the option to reach a different conclusion? Can you trace an unbroken chain of causation beck to the Big Bang? Or was your own reasoning ability a meta-physical Cause of your decision?" — Gnomon — 180 Proof
Again, my coinage of a new spelling for an old concept goes right over the reductive head. Since, by "Meta-Physical" I mean the non-physical (e.g. mental) aspects of reality, I am thinking of changing the spelling to "Menta-Physical", to indicate that I am referring to subjective Ideas, not objective objects, Nor to super-natural spooks. For example, Genes are physical, while Memes are Menta-Physical : physical substrate but mental (imaginary) expression.Not meta-physical. The will does as it has come to be. Time is fundamental as motion/movement/causality since there was no stillness stopping everything. Consciousness came to be along the way since before life there wasn't any; same with life. The notion of a self is the result of experiencing. No mysteries left. — PoeticUniverse
PS___No mysteries? When did you achieve Enlightenment and Omniscience? Should I address you as "Bhodi"? :wink: — Gnomon
is magic a possibility?
or is it just magical thinking
something cant come from nothing. no matter if its spiritual or not. and therefore even a magical soul would not be able to create first causes, and therefore it would have no true free will
because despite everyone being too ignorant to realize it, true free will would be the ability to create first causes from nothing into the mind.
from that ego delusion comes the god delusion. the ego creates god — Miller
When I know that it will rain stars tonight I wanna go watch them and when someone/thing stops me, my free will is constrained in its freedom. The will to go see them is not determined by anything.The will to see them can have all kinds of determinants, but all of them together create the will. So again, determinants are necessary for free will. — Goldyluck
something cant come from nothing. no matter if its spiritual or not. and therefore even a magical soul would not be able to create first causes, and therefore it would have no true free will
because despite everyone being too ignorant to realize it, true free will would be the ability to create first causes from nothing into the mind. — Miller
Yes. I call it "FreeWill within Determinism".5. How appealing is being semi-autonomous? We have free will but only in a limited sense. — Agent Smith
Only an agent outside of our space-time world would be perfectly free. — Gnomon
“Free Won't” — Gnomon
conscious decisions — Gnomon
So, you are a Drone controlled by Fate, or a Cyborg doing the Will of the hive? And your Artistry and Poetry are done un-consciously by an AI program. All this time I thought you were a regular guy. :joke:Free won't decisions aren't free of the will either. No decisions are made in consciousness; consciousness reflects the brain product that has already finished and took time, plus even more time has passed while the representation in consciousness was being built and woven into the flow. — PoeticUniverse
So, you are a Drone controlled by Fate — Gnomon
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