your description of an indeterminist compatibilism — javra
I didn't describe an indeterminist compatibilism. I described an indeterminist compatibilist - a person who is a compatibilist, who happens to be an indeterminist.
The two positions aren't related. It's just a person who holds both positions at once.. — flannel jesus
If your description of an indeterministcompatibilismcompatibilist does not involve an indeterminst concept of free will, what on earth kind of free will can your description of an "indeterminstcompatibilismcompatibilist" possibly entail?
(I can so far only assume it then mandates a determinist concept of free will. But then how does one get a determinist concept of free will - i.e., a free will whose doings are causally inevitable in all conceivable cases - to in any way cohere with an indeterministcompatibilismcompatibilist's view???) — javra
what on earth kind of free will can your description of an "indeterminst compatibilism compatibilist" possibly entail? — javra
A compatibilist one — flannel jesus
OK. So, first let me say, I'm not interested in convincing you of compatibilism. I can't do that. I don't want to do that, it's beside the point. I'm not even interested in convincing you compatibilism is *coherent*. All I'm interested in is if you're able, after this, to translate someone saying "I'm a compatibilist" into a more broken-down paraphrasing of what they're probably saying. — flannel jesus
Others characterize libertarianism by what it means more generally, — SophistiCat
What does it mean more generally? — flannel jesus
I conceive of compatibilism as quite general, not any specific way of framing the process of choice making. Compatibilism is a classification of a set of beliefs, rather than a specific belief.
A compatibilist belief in free will is one that satisfies this criteria: whatever free will you think we have, you would think we have even if we live in a deterministic extended casual system - regardless of the specifics of how you actually believe our extended casual system works, and also regardless of if the casual system we're in is actually deterministic.
An extended casual system is deterministic if it evolves to the future in a singular way, where given a particular state at t1, you will always arrive at the same t2. Regardless of how that evolution works, regardless of how you choose to frame that evolution - whether you choose to invoke agency or choice or even souls, or you just stick to physics - if t2 will always follow from t1 no matter how many times you replay t1, then it's deterministic.
And I think everything you've laid out fits within that criteria. — flannel jesus
Try reading. What did I write? Here:Why? Why is mentioning a term that tim wood doesn't know the definition of incoherent? — flannel jesus
Which cries out for defining all these terms. I have pointed out above that the article's mention of non-D was at least incomplete/inadequate and either thereby incoherent or itself already incoherent. — tim wood
What distinguishes my account from compatibilist accounts is that it shares with most libertarian accounts a commitment to rational causation (as distinguished with Humean event causation), which is not merely indeterministic — Pierre-Normand
So, rational causation is indeterministic you say. I'm not really sure why you think that, or why appealing to "norms" would make it indeterministic (as far as I can see there's nothing in the definition of what a norm is that has really anything to do with determinism or indeterminism), but regardless....
If it's indeterministic, that means you think it's possible that Bob2 will do something different from Bob1 at T2, despite being perfectly identical in every way at T1, every way meaning including physically, mentally, spiritually, rationally - every aspect of them is the same at T1. So to engage with the argument in the article fully, I'd like to see what you posit as the explanation for the difference in behaviour between Bob2 and Bob1. They're the same, remember, so why did they behave differently in the exact same circumstance? — flannel jesus
In my view, it is indeed quite trivial that if Bob1 and Bob2 are identical, atom for atom, and likewise for their environments, and assuming microphysical determinism holds, then their behaviors will be the same — Pierre-Normand
If that's true for every decision in bobs life - that Bob1 and Bob2 and bob3 and... Bob∞ will always do the same given identical everything, then... well, that's what determinism means. There doesn't look to be anything indeterministic about any of bobs decisions. That's the very thing that distinguishes determinism from indeterminism. — flannel jesus
That's only physical determinism. Physical determinism is a thesis about the causal closure of the physical and the deterministic evolution of physical systems considered as such — Pierre-Normand
That's not what I'm talking about at all. I'm taking about determinism. Any determinism. Physical or otherwise — flannel jesus
I know. And there is not evidence that (unqualified) determinism is true. — Pierre-Normand
The article in the OP isn't an argument for determinism. The conclusion of the article isn't "and therefore determinism is true". I think multiple people are getting mixed up on that. — flannel jesus
need not arise if one deems physical determinism not to entail unqualified determinism. — Pierre-Normand
I don't understand why you keep bringing up physical determinism at all. Even if there isn't a single physical thing in existence, and agents are all purely non physical things, the argument still makes perfect sense. Even if we're all floating spirit orbs, as long as we make choices over time, the argument holds as far as I can tell. It had nothing to do with physical anything, other than for the coincidence that we happen to live in an apparently physical world. That fact is entirely irrelevant to the conversation as far as I can tell. — flannel jesus
People generally assume that the dependency of actions on past law-governed neurophysiological events (for instance) entails some form of determinism. It does. But it merely entails physical determinism—the existence of regular laws that govern material processes in the brain, for instance. But this low-level determinism doesn't extend to high-level processes such as the exercise of skills of practical deliberation that manifest an agent's sensitivity to norms of rationality. — Pierre-Normand
But we can go through it again.... — flannel jesus
That's just the actual distinction between a deterministic system and an indeterministic one. In a deterministic system, the future states follow from past states, precisely and without variation. In an indeterministic system, they kinda semi loosey goosey follow from past states but with some wiggle room - a sprinkle of randomness. — flannel jesus
The main issue in the free will debate is whether or not and in what sense humans have free will. That is, are human choices or actions free, and if so, in what sense are they free?....
...So under libertarianism, the decision to do one action over the other ends up being arbitrary after all. Thus, libertarianism cannot actually explain or make rational why an agent chooses one course of action over another.
But only under a condition defined to make it arbitrary, — tim wood
and that moreover is conceded to be impossible. — tim wood
I do not wish to continue. I ask repeatedly for clarification, and you reply with non sequiturs.It is? — flannel jesus
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