Thoughts? — Pantagruel
I'm not sure that it follows that will is subjective, but rather that people have different attributes, capabilities, potencies of addictions, etc. It is much harder for an alcoholic to refuse a drink than for someone who just has a beer every now and then - even if the alcoholic might have significant willpower. I would say that the extent to which someone can accomplish something they will to or will not to do is instead relative based on their attributes and extraneous factors. — ToothyMaw
First a question - how is will different from intention? — T Clark
In my experience, most of our actions are unwilled. Not that they are inadvertent, but that they arise without conscious or rational thought. — T Clark
Hmm. And I tend to think the opposite. Two people can have the exact same physical abilities, but one person is able to push further - past the pain barrier, per your second point. — Pantagruel
That is what I was trying to catch in my intro - intending to do something is a choice, but there can be obstacles to enacting a choice. To what extent one is or isn't prevented by obstacles is where it becomes a question of will. — Pantagruel
I agree, this I would say is the operation of habits. As mentioned though, will can also be internalized towards the modification of our own habits. Which can also be more or less difficult. — Pantagruel
Insofar as ethics is concerned, the role of will would be relatively controversial, I think. However, I can say my own desire to seek some sort of higher moral truth is an act of will, as it certainly involves obstacles to my biased, although admittedly developed, primate brain. Thus, according to it as so defined, it is different from the mere intention of intending to do what is right or wrong. There is an impetus to discover, even if it takes me to some unpleasant or weird places. — ToothyMaw
Is ethics always about what you think is right? Or is it about not doing what is easy? I just don't know. — Pantagruel
But people want easy answers like that - ethics is about norms enforced by a will to control - and will is both the means and the end. — ToothyMaw
I think this last observation is great. The will is both a means and an end; we must utilize our will in order to strengthen it. :up: — Pantagruel
It is in this sense that the will as applied both externally and internally is the crux. — Pantagruel
The plans of the mind belong to man,
but the answer of the tongue is from the Lord. — RSV
There is a way which seems right to a man,
but its end is the way to death.
26
A worker’s appetite works for him;
his mouth urges him on.
27
A worthless man plots evil,
and his speech is like a scorching fire.
28
A perverse man spreads strife,
and a whisperer separates close friends.
29
A man of violence entices his neighbor
and leads him in a way that is not good.
30
He who winks his eyes plans perverse things,
he who compresses his lips brings evil to past. — RSV
Thoughts? — Pantagruel
Effort. I've spent a lifetime doing difficult things. My personal experience, will is real. — Pantagruel
So what is will and can you articulate its elements in dot points? — Tom Storm
It's existence isn't something that I doubt or want to debate. — Pantagruel
More in figuring out its role in relation to doing versus not doing, persistence in solving problems and learning, self-control, etc. — Pantagruel
My point is that what you are calling will might well be a conflation of complex psychological processes. Worth considering. — Tom Storm
people don't need more will power, they need to reimagine who they are. — Tom Storm
Indeed. And do you not think that is the ultimate act of will? — Pantagruel
Have you heard of Joseph Sirgy? — Pantagruel
I feel I am well-qualified to evaluate the nature of will. — Pantagruel
I am not saying people don't set and achieve goals, sometimes with the zeal of an addiction. I'm not saying that people can't be determined. I just don't think will holds up to being fetishised or understood as a transcendent, transformative virtue — Tom Storm
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