Free will and consciousness are synonymous. Consciousness is the manifestation of free will — Pantagruel
Claiming that free will does not exist would be a self contradictory action, because who could be making the claim? — Pantagruel
Postulating something is an event of free will.
Isn't it? — Pantagruel
If consciousness does anything at all, it must be because it is free to have done so, otherwise it would not be responsible for what it had done. — Pantagruel
But what you are doing is denying the reality of subjectivity because you cannot explain how consciousness interacts with matter — Pantagruel
Our material universe now is infinitely more complex than that of our essentially physically identical ancestors 100,000 years ago — Pantagruel
If there is no such thing as free will, then everything is moot, most importantly, any discussion about it, which could not be taking place. — Pantagruel
Without the concept of free will there can be no responsibility for anything,
and consequently no meaning.
Free will and consciousness are synonymous.
Consciousness is the manifestation of free will.
One of the most fundamental interpretations of life is self-direction,
Claiming that free will does not exist would be a self contradictory action,
Postulating something is an event of free will.
Boy, that's a whole lot of criticism without much substance. Pot meet kettle. — Pantagruel
if I consider the faculty of understanding which I possess, I find that it is of very small extent, — Pantagruel
Again, I am effecting a definition of the domain which for which this assertion is fundamental. Consistent with the reality that most people, including myself, experience every day.
John Searle remarked in an interview that 'the average man on the street is a Cartesian.' There's a reason for that.
I'm certain that in our day to day experience of the executive function we are definitely not as free as we believe ourselves to be. It's well established that our minds are subject to numerous 'cognitive biases' that preformat our perceptions and decisions. As well experiments have shown that a supposedly free choice can be anticipated in the brain by as much as several seconds.
However I believe consciousness is more akin to a cybernetic system in its role as mediator of input and output. It's behaviours are essentially rule-governed and these rules are cognitive habits. So in my view, the most powerful form of conscious freedom consists in one's ability to modify one's own cognitive habits. — Pantagruel
It is my opinion that, if my mind were constrained in the way you describe, I would not be capable of having the fundamental experience of consciousness. Cogito ergo sum. This was the exact point at the heart of Descartes' philosophy. 1. Doubt everything (a very rigorous way to conduct yourself epistemically). 2. What cannot possibly be doubted? That I am having this experience now.
Consciousness is the experience which is by its very nature necessarily free from compulsion. — Pantagruel
A is not free to do x; A does x - is self contradictory. To do something I must be able to do it. To be able to do it, I must be free to do it. I cannot throw a switch if my hands are tied. — Pantagruel
I'm sure that it does 'mesh' with the deterministic schema within which your evaluations take place, — Pantagruel
I am asserting that there is such a thing as subjective causation. — Pantagruel
If determinism were the case, you couldn't have (conscious) experiences, you couldn't doubt things, etc. because? — Terrapin Station
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