Hence freedom turns out to be a mirage the moment psychology looks into what is supposedly its innermost domain; for "the part which force plays in nature, as the cause of motion, has its counterpart in the mental sphere in motive as the cause of conduct."
...even were we to replace "psychology" with "neuroscience". If you explain your choices in terms of neuroscience, you have to change what you mean by "free", or leave it out altogether. — Banno
it's the outside world that the brain is computing data from data presented to it that goes by-by forever, because the brain computing the outside world has been damaged. — Garrett Travers
The brain contains an inside version of the outside world. If the Sun goes red giant your outside world is destroyed. You can't life in it anymore. The brain doesn't compute. Outside physical structures can run around analogous on the neuron network. Space is the medium for physical processes, the neural network for the analogue process. For all physical processes there is a possible process on your neuron network. The number of paths the currents in your brain can run is enormous: about 10exp(10exp20)! A 1 followed by 10exp20 zeroes... — Dijkgraf
The passage quoted from SEP was merely to show the facile and spurious claim that the idea of free will originated with the Church fathers for what it is. — Janus
Questions of moral responsibility and freedom are inevitable in any society where a tradition of thinking about the human situation arises. — Janus
Well, you are not the first person here to claim that they have solved the problem of consciousness.
But you are claiming that we have free will and yet are not free? — Banno
Except that I consider the neuron processes as well as the processes around me as not being part of me. I have a relation to them but they don't constitute me. — Dijkgraf
If the sum total of all your thought and action do not constitute you, then what possibly can? — Garrett Travers
The one I see in the mirror. I operate between my brain and the world. — Dijkgraf
That will is the sum total of all individual human action and thought. — Garrett Travers
Might leave it there. — Banno
No, your brain controls the entire body you see in the mirror. In fact, that which you are seeing in the mirror, is quite literally the sum total of all of your action and thought right then and there. All of which is controlled by the brain. — Garrett Travers
Yes, but I only use these functions. If you consider yourself to be your body, I just exist between the brain and the outside world. The outside world is projected into the brain inside (via the sensory organs) me and the brain actively shapes its appearance. — Dijkgraf
You shape the appearance of the outside world? In what manner? You make things change form, color? Telekinesis? Lou Kang style fire balls? Petronus charms? What are we talking about here? — Garrett Travers
I think it's fair to say that if we have any capability of control at all, then that is a quantum of freedom. If we never could have done otherwise than we did, then freedom is an illusion; — Janus
No. The brain just shapes the sensory perceptions. Colors, shapes, sounds, motions, etc. The perceptions can also appear on their own, say in thoughts or dreams. — Dijkgraf
Where does the "you" part come in that you were mentioning? — Garrett Travers
The will IS itself and cannot will itself to be anything else. — Garrett Travers
I beg to differ, within the combined context of the historical views, linguistic common usage, and modern cognitive neuroscience I am 100% confident that we can agree that will is the sum total of all human thought and action, the emergent expression of the content of the information that the brain processes, integrates, values, and enacts, and all activities of the brain that contribute to that process. I will be happy to build my argument again for you, which.... again, still has not been attempted to be challenged by more than one person, or so. And hasn't been bested in argument. — Garrett Travers
Why do you speak of a 'passage presented by me' rather than address it as what St. Augustine says? To my knowledge, it is representative of what he says in other places. If you find this statement of his problematic, should that not be taken up as a challenge to his intent? — Paine
I disagree that turning 'toward its private good' is equivalent to "turning inward towards the maintenance of one's own well-being." Augustine says, " It turns to its own private good when it desires to be its own master. The will wanting to be its own master is not a concept in Aristotle's practical art of distinguishing what is good from what only seems to be. Turning 'inward' for Augustine is accepting that one must choose one life or another. The experience of the conflict is given through Paul's terms in the Letter to the Romans: — Paine
Please give an example of that language in Plato. — Paine
In so far as doing bad things is the result of ignorance, isn't a 'faculty of choice' an idea that Socrates makes problematic? — Paine
The distance between Plato and Paul on these matters causes me to think that the term "Christian Platonism" is an oxymoron. — Paine
Are you saying that Arendt’s own notion of freedom as action is deterministic, or that her representation of Enlightenment concepts of intellect and will that she is critiquing are deterministic? — Joshs
Much of our behavior is ‘habituated’ in that our desires are expectations projected forward from previous experience. But this is as true of motivation by ‘internal forces’ as it is of allegedly rote habit. In both cases, an into oak action is involved which implies both past history( habit) and a novel, creative element. Whether i eat out of huger for for some other reason, as long as the act is conscious, it matters to me in some way and has some sense to it. — Joshs
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