Animals don't operate on beliefs. Animals don't have language. So I've never been very impressed with views that try to explain animal behavior in this way. Don't see the usefulness of it. — Mikie
As a though experiment, what would a world in which free will "violates the normal functioning" of the laws of physics look like? How would we detect such a violation? — Echarmion
What determinist chain?Sam Harris argues that in the chain of causation the buck does not stop and our "free will" cannot interrupt the determinist chain. — Edmund
I wouldn't go that far. I don't consider animals as having beliefs, tacit or otherwise. I think that's an anthropomorphic projection. — Mikie
Is it useful to view human behavior this way? — Mikie
I believe that every behavior can be interpreted as ethical but we aren't bound to be ethical at all times. Unless, they're in the military or something. — Shawn
The philosopher's task — Metaphysician Undercover
The will seems related to the idea of self, to the idea of independence, to the idea of responsibility (you mentioned that) but then that amounts to overlooking an obvious truth about what will is; — Agent Smith
compulsion is the absence of will. — Agent Smith
But I don’t see what the activity of the will consists of once it has started an action off. Are you saying that the will is like the driver of a train, who always monitors, but only acts when required, or that it is like the driver of a car, who has to control the car every second it is moving? — Ludwig V
Now this concerted effort which overrides the mechanistic causation of what could have happened, if the person did not exercise the will in this way, has to be looked at for a cause of it. If the mechanistic action has a mechanistic cause, then why wouldn't the concerted effort to prevent that action also have a mechanistic cause? Each can be said to be "the will". Either the will allows the describable mechanistic action to occur, or it disallows it, so the type of causation, as "the will", is the same in each of the two cases — Metaphysician Undercover
You are very trusting of people's rationality and your own if you are sure that people defending positions that you find absurd must be self-consciously acting in bad faith. — Ludwig V
But it is not true that actions are necessarily environmentally triggered. That is what will power, and the capacity to break habits demonstrates to us. If we cannot in every instance of a willfull act, establish a necessary relation between an environmental trigger, and the act, we cannot make the conclusion that such acts have an environmental trigger. — Metaphysician Undercover
So just as much, or more, will power is required to produce a habit, as is required to break a habit. — Metaphysician Undercover
In the question as to the nature of the will, we need to position the will in relation to the habit. The habit is the propensity to actualize a potential in a specific way, and the habit is situated as a property of the potential to act, by Aquinas. A potential however, cannot actualize itself, so the habit being a property of the potential to act, cannot be the cause of the act which is specified by a description of the habit. — Metaphysician Undercover
I suppose it depends on what motivates knowledge seeking and society building. Science can find out things but to what end we apparently cannot derive goals or teleology from science. People might resort away from science for personal meaning and morality. — Andrew4Handel
I think people are creating a society with differing end goals and values that are actually counter productive and incompatible.
There is obviously a compromise, however I do not think these fundamental ideological differences are taken seriously. — Andrew4Handel
Will is simply what the universe "will" do through the mechanism of cause and effect in every one of its parts. The will that every person feels that they have is the result of universal laws playing out in the body and mind of that person. — punos
I feel that the role of the social and physical world in which we live in making us who we are is very important and should not be neglected. — Ludwig V
I'm believe that people often don't know what they want or what they are doing. — Tom Storm
Yes, as I describe in people who can violently defend clearly absurd positions, will can be misused. For me, they would be self-consciously acting in bad-faith at some level.It is easy to come up with examples in which a strong will is not a good thing, but actually destructive. — Ludwig V
This is also something that interests me. Reason definitely ought to bolster will. I think it is a question of being able to achieve certainty, rational certainty, versus irrational certainty.The mystery is, however, that one can put together a perfectly clear rationale for an action, but yet fail to undertake it. — Ludwig V
we are not even certain that humans have free will. — Tom Storm
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
people don't need more will power, they need to reimagine who they are. — Tom Storm
My point is that what you are calling will might well be a conflation of complex psychological processes. Worth considering. — Tom Storm
So what is will and can you articulate its elements in dot points? — Tom Storm
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
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
First a question - how is will different from intention? — T Clark
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