Desire Yes of course I am making that assumption. It appears blatantly obvious to me, that my personal desires are completely distinct from society as a whole. Do you not agree? I would not think that society is expressing its desires through me. My desires are intrinsically selfish, stemming from my own physical needs. But I may conform, to want what I think society wants from me. — Metaphysician Undercover
on the surface level it appears that way, your personal desires may seem to be different as I stated, when I say template I dont mean that it is based on frivolous desires such as you liking the colour orange or liking a particular smell, I mean exactly what you said that we have a whole array of templates to choose from, but even when we seem to choose a template that choice was inspired by a previous template. Your personal desires are rooted within the human condition, the desire for more resources, happiness and 'love' now how these desires express themselves is where the sense of individuality comes in. But we are operating through the same stencil, we are humanity and humanity is comprised of individuals, and we as individuals perceive ourselves to be separate from others. Is that not a template? has this template not been reinforced to you by other individuals also operating on that same stencil?
Why would choosing a template require negating another? Imagine having hundreds of templates laid out on the table, each with its own principle of application. Depending on my situation, I choose the one I think is best suited for my purpose. I don't negate the others, I leave them accessible to me for when I am in a different situation and require a different template. — Metaphysician Undercover
All choices overtly or covertly are negations most of the time, you chose to join this forum because the prospect of not joining did not entice you, I chose to respond to your comment because the prospect of not responding did not alure me. Maybe negation is the wrong word to use but its our ability to oppose a desire that is the underlying truth. You chose the one best suited for you because you were able to realize what was not best for you, to determine what you like you must know what you dont like, its the inescapable polarity that exists in all choices.
I agree that templates cannot be avoided, and that if I am to be a human being I will necessarily use them. But I do not agree with your logic which concludes that because we use templates we have no free will. There may be hundreds, thousands, or even millions of existing templates. We are able to dismantle them and create new ones out of combining parts from different ones. So the number of possible templates is countless. With that amount of freedom of choice, how do you conclude that the use of templates indicates that the will is not free? — Metaphysician Undercover
It appears as if you are choosing your templates but as I stated above, you work out what you want by discovering what you dont want. There's no pure decision or pure choice because our preferences are lent by already existing templates. The amount of templates may be countless it doesn't matter your preferences will always coincide with the things you dont prefer. You cannot choose a favorite color without seeing the other colors, you cannot know you love philosophy without being exposed to shallowness. So your idea of will comes in when you decide to choose a template but if we had to truly investigate why you chose it the reason will be evident that there was no will involved. You like what you like either because somebody as liked it or the chemistry of your body signals to you that you should like it, you dont stand aside from these processes, they happen to you and there only appears to be a will involved because a thought occupies our consciousness that says I am the one who chose that, and I am the one that chooses my experiences, it's an illusion, its just a thought.