Comments

  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    I don't know what you're confused about. I never said you're a compatibilist. Pull yourself together man.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    my idea of free will is not incompatible with the possibility that the universe is fully deterministic and they everything is causally inevitable. I do not believe I've wavered on that for a moment at any time in this conversation.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    that's right, it's determinism and free will. Those are the two compatible things.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    5 points for the first person who can explain why "x is compatible with y" is not synonymous with "x requires y"
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    you still haven't figured out what compatible means
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    patterners example was about determinism. If you're just asking about determinism, I think you know my answer. If you don't, can you reword your question to just explicitly be about determinism or indeterminism?
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    I'm agnostic about determinism. I lean slightly towards "our universe is deterministic, but in a way that's indistinguishable from indeterminism from the inside"

    And I've tried to make clear that my position on free will is compatibilist in that it doesn't require determinism or indeterminism.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    so you know I'm a compatibilist. I haven't changed my mind on that. So, knowing I'm a compatibilist, and knowing thus that my idea of free will does not require indeterminism, and does not require that it be ontologically true that, given the exact same conditions, something different could happen, does that answer your question?

    My concern in just answering directly is that I'm not confident I understand what you mean. If you played ball with the rewind test, I would perhaps have been able to figure out what you mean, but without that I feel like I'm just guessing at what you mean.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    I'm not talking about omniscience at all, just a being with a rewind button for our universe. If a brain in a vat dragon has the rewind button, then he's the god in question.

    The difference between indeterminism and determinism is, given the exact same conditions, with determinism you get the exact same result every time. With indeterminism you don't. That's what this rewind test is all about. It's an easy to visualise way of setting up the same exact conditions.

    So when you say "could in fact choose", I'm trying to figure out if you mean like in an indeterministic way, or if you mean some other way.

    Because some people think you "could in fact choose" even if you get the same result every time from the same condition.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    What does it mean to "in reality have a choice between the two" though? If you're the god of some universe, and you want to check if someone "in reality has a choice between the two", how would you check that if not doing the rewind test?

    I say god because we can't check that sort of thing from inside the universe. It's gotta be tested from outside.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    You mean under the exact same conditions, right? You said it has nothing to do with the rewind test, but... that's it for me. That's what I imagine as the "rewind test". A god pressing rewind on the VCR that is our universe, then pressing play and seeing what happens.

    So this god sees me do one thing, presses rewind, so all relevant causal facts are the same, presses play and then he sees me do something different, right? That's what you mean by "allows me to have chosen differently", right? It means there's a non-zero probability that I actually do something different, despite being perfectly the same, the second time around. Yeah?
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    I think the biggest part of it is that my conscious experience doesn't seem to be epiphenomenal. I can make a concsious choice and my body can enact it. A lot of detreminists (maybe not most, idk) can be elimitavists about the mind and about choice and reasoning and decision making. I'm not an eliminativist. I'm a non-eliminativist reductionist - I think minds are real, I think consciousness really happens, I think conscious choice really happens, I think we really deliberate and consider "alterantive possibilities" (regardless of if those possibilities are ontologically real possibilities), and I guess in some sense I call all that crap free will.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    do you believe that you could have chosen otherwise at an past juncture of choice-makingjavra

    If we do some rewind experiment, and it does end up with me making a different choice despite being under exactly the same conditions, that difference in choice isn't due to my will, it's due to randomness. I'm not saying, and haven't said, that free will is contingent on the possibility that i could rewind time and make a different choice.

    It may be ontologically true that if time was rewound, quantum randomness allows for a different choice to be made. But I didn't call that "free will" at any point. That's just random. Random is random, random isn't human freedom.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    Can you clarify what your here addressingjavra

    The question you asked.

    I do not believe I expressed anything about free will being contingent upon randomness.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    I don't think so. Do you think so?

    I think explicitly saying "it doesn't account for it" is exactly the opposite of me saying it's contingent on it. How could I say randomness doesn't account for it, but also think that it's contingent on randomness? I think you're interpreting these words in the exact wrong direction.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    It doesn't Account for it. It's just there. It exists. Not everything that exists has to account for everything else that exists. I don't believe the chemical behaviour of Uranium accounts for the behaviour of birds in flight. They're just two things that happen to happen in the same universe.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    IF there's quantum randomness, genuine randomness, then probably. If Many Worlds is the case, then at any point where quantum randomness might have produced different results for a particular choice, in Many Worlds there's some version of me that made each possible choice.

    But I don't think that either of those things are required for free will.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    that it's mostly irrelevant. It's an implementation detail that doesn't give us or deny us free will.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    Ah sorry I didn't realize that's what you were asking for. A single event that's a hybrid.

    Well, I'm a programmer, and as a programmer I can tell you, fundamentally if I wanted to develop a hybrid process, there's always a function call to the *random number generator* as one command, and the function that uses that random result as another one. So I don't necessarily think any *single event* is hybrid at that detailed level of description, no. Maybe it is, idk, I'm agnostic. I'm not sure it matters either way.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    it works like this:

    The Schrödinger equation evolves the wave function deterministically, and then at some moment it collapses the wave function randomly, with the probabilities of that random collapse determined by the shape of the wave function
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    I don't think it's paradoxical.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    others disagree with thisjavra

    I'm not talking about what is the correct interpretation of quantum mechanics. I'm not making an ontological claim that this is true about the world. I'm talking about a concept - regardless of if that concept matches reality. Conceptually, this way of interpreting quantum mechanics is a hybrid.

    I actually explicitly DON'T think that interpretation is likely to be correct. But I'm not worried about that, I'm just worried about giving you a suitable example to the question you asked. I think it is, regardless of the fact that I don't think the world actually works that way

    Are you asking me for an example that I think really genuinely exists in real life? Because I don't think that was specified in the way you asked your question.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    you should make a thread about what interpretation you think is correct
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    you asked for a hybrid. Its a hybrid. It is a process which is in part deterministic and in part random.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    nobody is suggesting it's correct. It's an idea. The idea is an idea which matches the concept of a hybrid of determinism and randomness.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    your explanation doesn't make it not an example though. It feels like you're trying to bait out some specific answer you have in mind. I don't know what that is so I'm not guessing the thing you want me to say.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    I really don't understand why "quantum randomness" isn't a solid example of the question at the end of your post. That, to me, would be a hybrid.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    i feel like what I said about quantum crap is a good example, no?
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    Because if I think incompatibilists understood free will incorrectly, because they understand it in such a way that it's incompatible with determinism, then it doesn't matter if I'm a determinist or not, it doesn't matter if the world is determinist or not. If they have the wrong concept of free will, then it's wrong, regardless of what I think about determinism or randomness separately.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    Well, if you deny determinism then there is nothing to discuss when it comes to compatibilism.MoK

    I don't agree
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    how can free will be stated to be real if the act of deciding is of itself randomjavra

    Because the options aren't 100% determinism and 100% randomness. There's also the option of <some randomness>.

    If quantum randomness is the case, then it's not like everything that happens in the world is completely random. Quantum events are governed by the Schrödinger equation, so even if the event isn't deterministic, the range of possibilities is deterministically decided, and it seems to be that the randomness that does exist in a quantum sense kind of averages out macroscopically.

    So in such a view, it's not just a nonsense world where everything is random and nothing is causally connected to past states. There's still a sense of causality, with some random quantum wiggle room.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    compatibilism is about the existence of free will in a deterministic world rather than a random worldMoK

    Compatibilism is about conceiving of free will in such a way that it's compatible with determinism, which is distinct from an explicit claim that determinism is in fact the case.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    I don't know, we don't have to focus on that, I said pretty much every compatibilist believes in free will, so it doesn't really matter that I can conceive of some weird edge case. We can just ignore that edge case. I'm happy to
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    Perhaps that just because I think free will is compatible with determinism doesn't mean I actually believe we do have free will.

    As in, "there's a possible world where determinism is true and beings in that world have free will, this just doesn't happen to be one of them".

    I'm certain the vast majority of compatibilists don't take a position like that though.
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    I could probably be persuaded otherwise on some weird technicality but yeah, i think someone who calls themselves a compatibilist is almost certainly someone who believes humans have free will in this universe
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    your first question was how can the stance of compatibilism be compatible with randomness?

    Why wouldn't it be? I don't know what's so unsatisfying about my answer to you, I feel like I'm answering pretty straight forward, but since that's not satisfying to you, let me know why you think a world with a little bit of randomness is necessarily contrary to a compatibilist idea of free will
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    is hard to answer a post with many questions while staying focused, I do prefer answering one question at a time. A failing of mine perhaps, I focused on the last one.

    If the world has a little bit of randomness, that doesn't necessarily destroy the causality one needs to enact one's will. So that should be the answer to your first two questions, right?
  • Why I'm a compatibilist about free will
    i don't understand what you're perceiving as an ego battle. I genuinely tried to explain why compatibilists don't have to hard-commit to determinism. Can you explain what part of my answer feels like an ego-battle to you?