You did.I don't see where in the article he concedes that's impossible. — flannel jesus
Ok, so now that you know it's a thought experiment, and not a real experiment, and nobody thinks it's a real experiment and nobody is suggesting we conduct it in physical reality, — flannel jesus
"So under libertarianism, the decision to do one action over the other ends up being arbitrary after all." But only under a condition defined to make it arbitrary, and that moreover is conceded to be impossible
You say that, but then you confirm that Bob2 would always do the same thing as Bob1, which is what determinism means. — flannel jesus
But my point is that physical determinism—the deterministic laws governing physical processes like brain states—doesn’t explain why Bob1 or Bob2 are acting in the way that they are. It doesn't provide the right causal story and so it leaves something important out of the picture. — Pierre-Normand
Which is why I can't stress enough that "physical" isn't particularly important here. Afaik you brought up physical determinism. It isn't mentioned in the article and I didn't bring it up. Sure, maybe there are non physical things that go into deciding future states, future choices, future actions. That's not in question. Nobody is denying that. Whether you believe all that explains how the world evolves is physical or not doesn't seem to be to have anything to do with the argument at hand. — flannel jesus
This gets tiresome. You tell me. — tim wood
I think you're reading stuff into it that isn't there. It doesn't say any of that explicitly, and I don't believe it says it implicitly either — flannel jesus
The system you described, where you roll back the clocks and everything happens the same, is the very definition of a deterministic system. — flannel jesus
If it were somehow possible to repeat a situation in which I made a certain choice and everything in that situation was exactly the same in every possible way, libertarian free will would entail that I could, this second time around, make a different choice. — Janus
that is impossible, then libertarian free will cannot be the case, by definition. — Janus
It follows that that free will means simply 'acting according to one's nature'. Since we don't create ourselves, this seems the most sensible notion of free will: that is a compatibilist notion. — Janus
But the ideas of causal inevitability of actions, or of their "[necessitation] by antecedent events and conditions together with the laws of nature", are usually justified by questionable inferences — Pierre-Normand
... follow up to my previous post, I wanted to ask an LLM just for fun. An LLM is of course not a replacement for a human expert or an individuals thought, but when it comes to how words are used i think they can at least have interesting insights. Perhaps this is interesting, perhaps not: — flannel jesus
you would have to be perfectly the same too. But I think you already factored that in.. — flannel jesus
It's actually not so much about it being impossible, but rather that it doesn't seem to give us free will in any meaningful sense if it is possible — flannel jesus
Yeah, if every time you reset the system to the same initial conditions, it evolves in exactly the same way, then in the most straightforward sense, that’s what we mean by a deterministic system.
The extra philosophical layers we discussed—about high-level properties, rational norms, and interpretation—introduce complications about how we describe and explain what’s happening, but they don’t change the basic fact that, at the fundamental level, the system itself is unfolding in a fully determined way.
Would you say, then, that the distinction you're drawing is less about whether the system is deterministic and more about whether determinism at the physical level is the right kind of explanation for high-level rational agency?
What I meant with that is if in that 'rewind' scenario we could not make a different choice, then libertarian free will would seem to be ruled out by definition, since any consistent notion of libertarian free will requires that we could have made a different choice — Janus
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