But keeping it simple, supposing one has a general duty of care to one's fellow beings, one who is bent on harming his fellows thereby forfeits his own right to be cared for. — unenlightened
I thought the claim to have acted in self defence was the way one justified an act of harm. — unenlightened
...if the principle of self defence cannot stand alone... — unenlightened
A justification needs to be more than a simple claim or assertion — Leontiskos
Can you justify this claim? Where do justifications bottom out? I'm probing the probing here. — unenlightened
I might talk about a 'necessary mutuality' of moral behaviour, such that the thief forfeits his right to possess his own property — unenlightened
On a standard view, the moral wrongness of killing and injuring is grounded in persons’ having stringent moral rights against such treatment. If defensive harming is at least sometimes morally permissible, it needs to be explained how the use of force can be consistent with these rights. Two broad types of justification are common in the literature.
The first holds that a person’s right against harm, though weighty, is not absolute and may be permissibly infringed if necessary to achieve a sufficiently important good. This is known as a lesser-evil justification.
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[Second justification...] Instead, the permission to kill Attacker is explained by his lack of a right not to be killed in the circumstances. This is known as a liability justification for harming. — Self-Defense | SEP
I don't know what the phrase "flow of intention" is supposed to mean
It's not so clear to me that self-defense involves an intent to harm.
When we consider self-defense in the context of double effect, and scrutinize the criterion that the bad effect may not be a means to the good effect, it becomes crucial to determine what we mean by a means. Is it a causal or temporal means?
When I look through Aquinas it would seem that he does not view harm as a proper act
An action 'simpliciter' is simply what your being is at any moment in time.
A decision to make an action
Assuming agency, if you choose to do A, but at the last second, pick B, you changed your choice to B.
A decision to make an action
I've already pointed this out once, but I am talking about mutually exclusive scenarios.
They chose to not pull the lever, and acted on it, because they thought it more moral to do something else
Omissibility in itself neither necessarily exempts or makes the person responsible
if we had a 50/50 situation, in which you only had two choices and both were equally bad, no one could judge you for your choice.
No, I'm not saying that at all.
And in the situation of moral choice, 'not acting' is the action you take.
Lionino, I think our conversation went astray — Bob Ross
I don't see how, in that case, you could argue that (1) there is not intent to harm nor (2) that the intent is direct. — Bob Ross
I was meaning a causal means, like pulling a lever. Technically the gun, or my fist (in case of punching), is the means and the effect is the bullet harming the aggressor. — Bob Ross
An action is a volition of will; and as such cannot be analyzes independently of the per se intention behind it. — Bob Ross
The solution, I think, is to reject 3: I realized that my theory is eudaimonic and not hedonic, and so I am not committed to the idea that harming someone, in-itself, is bad for them. — Bob Ross
Likewise, I find nothing wrong, now that I have liberated myself from 3, with deploying a principle of forfeiture whereby one can harm someone for the sake of preventing them from doing something wrong — Bob Ross
For me the heart of this thread is the question of the moral status of harm simpliciter. Supposing we have a duty to not harm or minimize harm, in what does this precisely consist? — Leontiskos
I don’t know what “action of agency” is vs. “action” simpliciter. — Bob Ross
A decision to make an action
I see the problem now: as a matter of definition, you must reject the idea of choosing to do nothing. — Bob Ross
You can decide, right now, to never respond to this message without choosing to go do something else instead: if that is true, then you made a choice to not make an action—which violates your definition of ‘choice’. — Bob Ross
You know me: I hate semantics as much as the next person; but if you define ‘choice’ in this way, then I would note that you must still agree that one can ‘reach a conclusion through the process of thinking’ which results in that ‘conclusion’ being that one should not act; and this then would not, by definition, be a ‘choice’ in your schema—but that’s what I am getting at. — Bob Ross
All this notes, is that ones actions are necessarily chosen; but not that ones choices are all about actions — Bob Ross
Choosing is the act of deciding: you circularly defined a ‘choice’ here with ‘decision’. I would submit to you that ‘making a decision’, ‘making a choice’, etc. are all the results of the process of thinking; and ‘thinking’ is an act of rational deliberation (even if it is irrational in the sense that one doesn’t have sound argumentation or hasn’t thought it through very robustly). If this is true, then you must accept that one can act without choosing; because one can act without thinking—and surely you agree, semantics aside, with that. — Bob Ross
I've already pointed this out once, but I am talking about mutually exclusive scenarios.
Got it: that wasn’t clear to me. You said it was a matter of a logical formula, which was confusing me. — Bob Ross
They chose to not pull the lever, and acted on it, because they thought it more moral to do something else
How did they act on it? What you are missing, is that the choosing to not pull the lever is a choice to refrain from acting; and if that is the case then they didn’t act on it. — Bob Ross
The point I was making is that an omission is sometimes permissible. — Bob Ross
Again, allowing something bad to happen is not as bad as doing something bad. — Bob Ross
I can choose to not respond to the post, but I choose to make some other type of action in my life.
I would say agency more than thinking, as one can act emotionally, then rationally think about it later.
"The action they took did not involve pulling the lever, because they thought it more moral to do that action then pull the lever."
With respect to #1, the problem is that you keep using examples where one coincidentally chooses a different act instead of doing the act in question (e.g., walking away instead of pulling the lever); but this is not always the case. For example, imagine you decide to just stand there and keep watching instead of pulling the lever: continuing to watch is not itself an action—instead, you would be deciding to not do anything and since you are already watching you continue to watch. — Bob Ross
What you are doing is failing to analyze the inaction in-itself—e.g., choosing to not get up is itself (A) a conclusion reached through thinking and (B) not a choice to do something. — Bob Ross
With respect to #2, even if I grant your point it does not follow that one cannot choose to do nothing: even in the case that it is true that “one must perform action X to avoid action Y”, it also true that the choice to not do Y precedes the choice to do X—all you are noting is that not doing Y requires a subsequent action which is not Y for Y to not be done. If this is true, then even under your view it must be conceded that choices can be about inactions—which violates your definition of ‘choice’. — Bob Ross
In your view, we end up with a peculiar conclusion that it is false that ‘one can choose to not do Y’ — Bob Ross
You are forgetting that deliberation is an act, but that it can be about inaction; and this means that one is technically acting when they are concluding to not do something (in virtue of performing the act of thinking), but that they are performing the act of choosing to not do anything. — Bob Ross
An emotion is not a result of a choice: you don’t choose what you feel. Choices are cognitive, not conative. — Bob Ross
"The action they took did not involve pulling the lever, because they thought it more moral to do that action then pull the lever."
This is wrong, because you have conflated a reason one may possibly have for not doing X with it being necessary that they have such a reason for not doing X: do you find it impossible for a person to choose to not pull the lever “because they simply wanted to watch them die”? — Bob Ross
1. It is morally impermissible to perform an action that is in-itself bad;
2. It is morally impermissible to directly intend something bad—even for the sake of something good;
3. Harming someone is, in-itself, bad. — Bob Ross
I've tried to explain that a choice is what you are going to do, and by consequence, what you actively chose not to do.
I understand that you use “choice” in a looser sense, but what exactly is it under your view? — Bob Ross
A decision to make an action. — Philosophim
The main issue is that your use of the concepts of ‘to choose’ and ‘to act’ are littered with incoherencies — Bob Ross
If to choose is to decide to make an action (notwithstanding the circularity in the definition), then you cannot claim that one “actively chose not to do” something. There is not such thing as “choosing not to do X” in your view by definition. — Bob Ross
Given your terms (and notwithstanding the circularity), when you say "I chose not to do X" that is equivalent to "I decided to perform the action of not doing X". — Bob Ross
I think the problem is that 'choice' can have two meanings
"Choice" as in 'intent to act' and "choice" as in 'how I acted'.
So let me break out the difference in choice by separating the two into 'unactualized choice' and 'actualized choice'.
This also requires us to dive into the definition of 'action' a bit.
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[actions] can be described as you noted, "a volition of will', or 'embodiment of being by intention'.
The point is, that choices are all about intent of action, or actual action.
Given your terms (and notwithstanding the circularity), when you say "I chose not to do X" that is equivalent to "I decided to perform the action of not doing X". — Bob Ross
No, it is equivalent to, "I decided to perform an action that was not X". It in no way means, "I took no action at all".
"Choice" as in 'intent to act' and "choice" as in 'how I acted'.
This is the closest you got to a definition, but instead of giving one noted two mutually exclusive definitions of the word; and I am not sure which one you mean to use for this discussion. Are you taking a pluralistic account of the concept? — Bob Ross
For me, ‘a choice’ is ‘the result of the act of rational deliberation [i.e., thinking]’ and ‘the act of choosing’ is ‘the act of rationally deliberating [i.e., thinking]’. — Bob Ross
I am assuming you don’t mean to say that ‘the act of choosing’ nor ‘a choice’ each have two equally cogent and incompatible definitions; so this actualized vs. unactualized distinction is just noting that when we choose to do something sometimes it doesn’t actually happen. I don’t have any problems with this; however, I must note that this in no way entails that all choices made are about actions. — Bob Ross
Are you agreeing that an ‘action’ is a ‘volition of will’? It seems like you are accepting my definition now, because this is the closest you got to defining an ‘action’ in your response. — Bob Ross
The point is, that choices are all about intent of action, or actual action.
Why? That just begs the question. — Bob Ross
No, it is equivalent to, "I decided to perform an action that was not X". It in no way means, "I took no action at all".
This is so patently false though! E.g., I can legitimately decide not to pick up my phone, and that is not itself the decision to respond to your response instead. — Bob Ross
Viz., one can decide to not perform an action, and this does not imply a decision to do something else—even if one has to perform actions for the rest of their life continuously. — Bob Ross
Sure, I never rejected your definition of action, I did add a little to it though. An action of will would be an action of agency. An autonomous action would not involve one's will, like a reflex or natural breathing.
This is my thinking as well. What you are describing is the present and future. "Choosing" is the present, and "choice" is either future or past. Future if you have yet to act on it, and past if you have.
If you're not doing X, and you're doing something else instead, aren't you doing an action?
Since you continue to fail to give an internally coherent definition of the vital concepts at play (e.g., ‘to act’, ‘to choose’, ‘a choice’, etc.) — Bob Ross
You cannot accept that an action is a volition of will and then say not all actions involve willing—that’s patently incoherent; so, no, you technically are not accepting my definition. This is why I wanted to you to define an ‘action’, because you are importing a definition which as of now remains utterly concealed and notional. For now, I am assuming that an ‘action’ is a ‘volition of will’ and, thusly, that an ‘autonomous action’, by virtue of being an action, does involve willing. — Bob Ross
If a ‘choice’ is ‘the result of the act of rational deliberation [i.e., thinking]’ and you agree with me (by saying ‘this is my thinking as well’), then you would have to agree that:
1. Not all actions involve choices.
2. Not all voluntary actions involve choices. — Bob Ross
Now, to avoid begging the question, I would like to point out that what makes the choice morally relevant is that it is about what is permissible, impermissible, omissible, or obligatory as those concepts relate to goodness and badness—irregardless if you would leave out inaction from consideration with respect to choices. — Bob Ross
Now, if we give an example of any of those moral modes of thought, then we can evidently see that it can pertain to inaction. E.g., it is permissible, sometimes, to not do something. — Bob Ross
You are failing to analyze the given choice per se: we are currently asking if a given choice can be about, and only about, not doing something. — Bob Ross
E.g., if I choose to not eat ice cream and go for a walk instead, I have chosen (1) to not eat ice cream and chosen (2) to go for a walk. The reasons for each decision may be interrelated, but they are separate decisions. — Bob Ross
This is why I think you are wanting an example of a morally relevant choice that results in inaction and are failing to find one, because in all my examples you are conflating the analysis of the given choice qua itself with qua all choices related to it. — Bob Ross
The most obvious example I have is choosing to not get up from one’s chair and continue doing whatever they were already doing. What you are going note is that whatever I am continuing to do is itself an action; and you would be right. — Bob Ross
However, (1) my choice to not get up is a choice solely about inaction, (2) my choice to keep doing what I am doing is a separate choice (albeit related), and (3) the choice to continue doing something is about continuing to act and does not introduce a new action into the mix. — Bob Ross
It would be helpful if you pointed out how its incoherent as I'm not seeing it. But its ok to move on.
”Sure, I never rejected your definition of action, I did add a little to it though. An action of will would be an action of agency. An autonomous action would not involve one's will, like a reflex or natural breathing. “ – Philosophim
You cannot accept that an action is a volition of will and then say not all actions involve willing—that’s patently incoherent; — Bob Ross
”"Choice" as in 'intent to act' and "choice" as in 'how I acted'. “ – Philosopim
This is the closest you got to a definition, but instead of giving one noted two mutually exclusive definitions of the word; and I am not sure which one you mean to use for this discussion. Are you taking a pluralistic account of the concept? — Bob Ross
"When I entered the cave, I sneezed," describes to me what people would call an action. Its one they couldn't help, a reflex that was outside of their autonomy, or choice. What are you calling an involuntary sneeze then?
I honestly have no issue in separating the two concepts if you have a term that properly covers 'autonomous' actions.
If an action is a volition of will, then how can it not be a choice? What you will to happen is what you choose to happen no?
I don't see how its possible to make an action and say, "I didn't choose to do it", if you voluntarily did it.
How do you reconcile this with the way the words are most commonly used in language?
Except what do the terms of permissibility mean? "They mean what you should, and should not act on".
I feel I've analyzed it pretty in depth at this point.
That would literally mean its permissible to cease to exist, and nothing more. Again, you're taking a figure of speech, "I did nothing", and thinking that means you actually did nothing. No, you did something. Give me an example in which you did absolutely no actions.
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This is why I think you are wanting an example of a morally relevant choice that results in inaction and are failing to find one, because in all my examples you are conflating the analysis of the given choice qua itself with qua all choices related to it. — Bob Ross
I don't understand what this means, can you elaborate more?
1. It is solely about inaction on that one particular option. It does not entail that you did not act on another option.
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Of course they are separate decisions.
The most obvious example I have is choosing to not get up from one’s chair and continue doing whatever they were already doing. What you are going note is that whatever I am continuing to do is itself an action; and you would be right. — Bob Ross
That's all I'm saying. If you understand this, you understand my position.
Remember, my original point was that, all else being equal, one should let themselves continue to starve because the only action they can take is to steal — Bob Ross
Under my definitions, sneezing upon entering a cave might constitute a voluntary act (although it would perhaps be a stretch); because it is a volition of will insofar as my body will’s to sneeze as a reaction. — Bob Ross
In my view, the knee-jerk reaction to the doctor hitting your knee (to test its reflexes) is a voluntary act; but not an act of choice. — Bob Ross
Remember, voluntariness is about what is in accordance with one’s will; and choosing is about what is in accordance with the conclusions of rational deliberation. — Bob Ross
Irregardless, an involuntary act would be like sneezing because one’s brain has a huge tumor in it that is causing the sneeze. — Bob Ross
What you are calling an ‘autonomous action’ is for me an action which is not a choice. There’s not second concept at play here for me: that’s the issue with your concepts. You agreed with my definition and then turned around and implicitly denied it. — Bob Ross
That is because you still haven’t defined the concepts! What is ‘voluntariness’ under your view? What is an ‘action’? — Bob Ross
For me, I have been very clear; and it follows from my definitions that an action can be voluntary without being a choice (since an action can be in correspondence with one’s will without being a product of rational deliberation [i.e., thinking]). — Bob Ross
Common language is full of vague, notional, incoherent, and irreconcilable uses of terms: I am not particularly interested in trying to fit my schema to match 1:1 the common usages; however, I am interested in giving a refined schema which can provide clarity with respect to their common usages. — Bob Ross
I feel I've analyzed it pretty in depth at this point.
Send me the links to where you defined the following clearly: ‘an action’, ‘to act’, ‘a choice’, ‘to choose’, and ‘voluntariness’. You haven’t. — Bob Ross
Except what do the terms of permissibility mean? "They mean what you should, and should not act on".
Permissibility is the mode of moral thought whereof one can do an act but doesn’t have to. What you just described is impermissibility or obligatoriness. — Bob Ross
The problem is that you are not understanding that a choice can be made about something without it also itself being made about something else. I have pointed out that one can choose to do nothing, and you keep pointing out that after making that choice they then separately choose to do something else. Plainly and simply put: one can reach a conclusion with rational thought which has absolutely no reference to performing an action and complete reference to not performing an action. — Bob Ross
1. It is solely about inaction on that one particular option. It does not entail that you did not act on another option.
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Of course they are separate decisions.
E.g., if I choose to not eat ice cream and go for a walk instead, I have chosen (1) to not eat ice cream and chosen (2) to go for a walk. The reasons for each decision may be interrelated, but they are separate decisions.
— Bob Ross
Of course they are separate decisions. But at the end of the day the choice is only realized by action. There is always a relation between what you acted on, and what you did not. Thus your actionable choice has something that you acted on, and something that you didn't. It is impossible to have what you didn't do, without what you did instead. I can claim I'm going to go eat ice cream, but if I go for a walk, I did not commit to my former choice, but instead chose to go for a walk. — Philosophim
The most obvious example I have is choosing to not get up from one’s chair and continue doing whatever they were already doing. What you are going note is that whatever I am continuing to do is itself an action; and you would be right. — Bob Ross
That's all I'm saying. If you understand this, you understand my position.
Which doesn’t demonstrate your original point, which was that choosing cannot be about inactions. — Bob Ross
Remember, my original point was that, all else being equal, one should let themselves continue to starve because the only action they can take is to steal. You cannot appreciate this if you keep denying that one can let something bad happen (which implies it was a result of inaction that is to blame for the bad thing happening). — Bob Ross
That is because you still haven’t defined the concepts! What is ‘voluntariness’ under your view? What is an ‘action’? — Bob Ross
An act of volition. An involuntary action like a reflex is not an act of volition.
Action - Noun. A bodily state at any tick of time.
Act of volition - Noun. An act based on will/consciousness/intention/agency.
Autonomous act - Noun. An unconscious act
To act - Verb. The act of undertaking an action at any tick of time.
A choice - Noun. A decision that when given a set of options to act on, one or more are chosen. Choices have a reason. They can be emotional, rational, but are made with agency. Reasons can be as simple as, "I didn't like the other choices", to complex as a highly refined argument. "Choice" can be defined in terms of the past, present, and future.
Past choice: A moment in time prior to now in which a decision was made to take an action at x time. X time may, or may not have passed. If X time has passed, and the action was completed at X, then the choice was fulfilled. If X time has passed, and the action was not completed at X, then that past choice was unfulfilled. A past choice is a promise of intent, but it is a promise that does not have to be kept.
Present choice: The option one has decided to act at the moment. An autonomous action is not a choice.
Future choice: A declaration of intention of how one will act at X seconds. A promise does not need to be fulfilled, and a choice can change up until the point of X seconds.
A choice - Noun. A decision that when given a set of options to act on, one or more are chosen
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Past choice: A moment in time prior to now in which a decision was made to take an action at x time
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Present choice: The option one has decided to act at the moment.
Future choice: A declaration of intention of how one will act at X seconds
Voluntary - The choice and/or action are made with agency.
This is a circular definition: you defined an action as an act of volition.
Action - Noun. A bodily state at any tick of time. — Bob Ross
Like I stated before, this would include what is clearly not an action—e.g., lying perfectly still in a coma. As bodily states are not always volitions of will. — Bob Ross
(Me) Act of volition - Noun. An act based on will/consciousness/intention/agency.
You are lumping a lot of distinct concepts together there: when people use the term “conscious”, they are usually referring to the ‘ego’ or, in other words, self-consciousness. That’s why most people still associate the ‘id’ with ‘subconsciousness’. — Bob Ross
Autonomous act - Noun. An unconscious act
I see what you are going for; but, again, unconscious acts are obviously willed. E.g., sleep walking. You are going to have a hard time explaining why sleep walking isn’t an action willed by the brain but yet is an unconscious act. — Bob Ross
To act - Verb. The act of undertaking an action at any tick of time.
This is circular: ‘to act’ cannot be defined in terms of ‘the act of <…>’. This definition needs to be thrown out. — Bob Ross
Why are you separating their definitions based off of time? A choice is a choice. Once you define what a choice is, then you can easily determine its past, present, and future tense. — Bob Ross
All of these are circular! A decision is a choice! — Bob Ross
Again, we have agreed now that it would be patently false to define a choice as about actions; so this definition of future choices and the extrapolated definition of a choice are both patently false. — Bob Ross
Do you see how all over the place your definitions are? How they inchohere with all the progress we’ve made at getting you to see that choices aren’t just about actions? — Bob Ross
What’s agency? We need to try to stick to the same terms so we can find common ground. This definition seems oddly close to mine (of an action in correspondence with one’s will) but there’s slight differences that I don’t know how to parse—e.g., splitting up a choice and an action in this definition implies that some choices are not actions (which you denied above in your definition of a choice) and that some of those can be made without agency (which makes no sense: how does one make a choice without thinking about it?--or do you just mean thinking about it but with external coercion involved?). — Bob Ross
A choice - Noun. An intent of action that when given a set of options to act on, one or more are chosen
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I have noted that there is the possibility of making a choice without regards to actions
Being in a coma is an autonomous action, not an act of will
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”Sure, I never rejected your definition of action, I did add a little to it though. An action of will would be an action of agency. An autonomous action would not involve one's will, like a reflex or natural breathing. “ – Philosophim
In the context of what I've written you would need to be conscious to have volition right?
The division between conscious and unconscious actions is a fairly common understanding in science
Do you believe that an action is only made if you alter the state you are in from a previous moment of time?
So I could be pulling the lever and it isn't budging. Two seconds later I get a choice that I can release the lever. But if we are to extend logically your implications on an action, because I've been pulling the lever, continuing to pull the lever isn't an action, while releasing it would be.
Your usage of the concept of a choice and the act of choosing are incoherent with the definition you have provided; as you defined a choice as necessarily about an intent to act, while also claiming that it is not necessarily about an intent to act. — Bob Ross
You’ve agreed with me that an action is a volition of will; but then incoherently claim that not all actions are volitions of will. — Bob Ross
For me, willing is ‘the exercised power of determining according to one’s will’; ‘a will’ is ‘the dispositions of an agent taken as a whole’; ‘an intention’ is ‘an end an agent has for something’; ‘intending’ is ‘acting’: ‘a volition of will [with an intention—which is implied given my definitions]’; and by ‘volition’ I mean ‘willing’ (viz., ‘a volition of will’ is the same as saying ‘an instance of willing’). — Bob Ross
For me, willing is ‘the exercised power of determining according to one’s will’ — Bob Ross
‘an intention’ is ‘an end an agent has for something’; ‘intending’ is ‘acting’: — Bob Ross
and by ‘volition’ I mean ‘willing’ (viz., ‘a volition of will’ is the same as saying ‘an instance of willing’). — Bob Ross
I completely agree that, in colloquial speech and legal speech, we would not say “I willed to sleep walk”; but this is because the terms are not robust, nor do they need to be, for their application. The average person has absolutely no robust account of what they mean by “I” nor what it means ‘to will’. — Bob Ross
In this sense, it is very clear that “I willed to sleep walk”—in the event that one did sleep walk—is (1) true (because the agent as a whole, comprised of the judging faculties of the brain, did will it), (2) an action (because it is an instance of willing), and (3) is not an instance of willing with the full capacities of that agent (taken as whole). — Bob Ross
Again, this distinction between voluntariness and choosing does not exist in colloquial speech: people say “I chose to do X” and “I did X voluntarily” interchangeably (because they have no robust analysis of these concepts). — Bob Ross
The problem is that we cannot make headway on this if you cannot provide a clear and robust alternative schema to what I have put forth here; and so far I have demonstrated (above) that your definitions are still internally incoherent. — Bob Ross
NO. That’s what I am trying to get you to see: if you are using a ‘consciousness’ vs. ‘unconsciousness’ schema (and omitting ‘subconsciousness’), then sleep walking is a conscious act. Normally sleep walking is a subconscious act—if it were an unconscious act, then there would be no walking whatsoever (as someone would is unconscious — Bob Ross
It may be the case that I am forcing my body to stay how it is, contrary to what it would be doing otherwise, through willing. — Bob Ross
Continuing to pull the lever is a part of the action which you are still performing; and one can make decisions while still acting; so, yes, me choosing to continue to perform action X does not create a new action Y. — Bob Ross
Again, the reason you are failing to understand this is because you have no robust nor internally coherent account of what an action vs. a choice is; nor how acting simpliciter relates to acting qua choosing. — Bob Ross
But a person's disposition is not will
What does the "exercised power of determining" mean?
Our job is to take the language that is commonly used, process it to be more accurate, clear up issues, etc. and put it back into the language of everyone else.
Specifically, what is the problem with will as commonly defined?
If the person is unconscious and sleeping, how is that at their full capacities? What example can you give of a person not at their full capacities, and why?
Why do people use it interchangeably?
In what sense is it logical to do so, and in what sense is it logically not to?
I defined 'choice' in this case as "a choice of action".
Your set has problems with ignoring involuntary actions
If your body does something against your will then, isn't that an involuntary action?
But according to your earlier definition of will as being synonymous with disposition, wouldn't this be a disposition and an act of will? What do you call your body doing an action without your will?
Continuing to pull the lever is a part of the action which you are still performing; and one can make decisions while still acting; so, yes, me choosing to continue to perform action X does not create a new action Y. — Bob Ross
You just noted exactly what I pointed out. "Choosing to continue to perform action x", or "Continuing to act" is a choice. Actions are performed over time.
Finally, what is 'acting simpliciter'?
I am unsure how to progress the conversation: I keep trying to get you to define what a choice and an action simpliciter are; and you seemed to just accept that you don’t have any—or don’t need to provide them. — Bob Ross
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