Sam Harris believes free will is an illusion. If he's right, would that mean we are all philosophical zombies?
Sam Harris believes free will is an illusion. If he's right, would that mean we are all philosophical zombies?
How would it walk if it thought nothing? How would it avoid damaging itself if it felt nothing? — Isaac
No, Sam’s position is that we do have epiphenomenal consciousness, that is phenomenal subjective experience without any causal effect, just passive observers. — Zelebg
A p-zombie could be an atomically and behaviorally perfect replica of you - acts, walks, talks, etc. just as you do, — Dunsy22
Free will, to me, is more a problem with identity. Who or what decides our next action? — NOS4A2
So, would you say a sense of agency is required? Would you say an 'intention" is required to determine/measure if 'free will' of the 'agent' actually occurred? If we are talking about a non-sentient software program in a robot agent then can it be called 'free will' if all the intentions of the robot were predetermined by its programmer? If the agent is not free to reprogram itself to create and act of its own intentions then it would seem it likewise cannot be said to have any meaningful 'free will'.
So it would have to learn the limits of its operation before intending how and in which way to operate. — NOS4A2
so, the agent would have to be self-aware?
It would at some point have to become self-aware. — NOS4A2
Maybe I misinterpret Sam's position, but I don't understand your interpretation either - could you elaborate? We have phenomenal subjective experience but ultimately only as passive observers (and not as 'active' observers with complete free will)?
Each of us firmly believes “I am not a p-zombie.” but if free will is an illusion as Sam claims, wouldn't that make us all p-zombies? — Dunsy22
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