Don't put words in my mouth. — Pathogen
Whenever a will is unhindered to operate within its means, and seeing this is the normal state of human beings possessing the faculty of will, a logical conclusion is that their will is free. — Pathogen
Free will is not essential to morality as it is a set of rules society has set up to dissuade potentially harmful behaviors between its comprising members. — Pathogen
It would manifest as an action free of prior causes. This is why I think free will (or true freedom as you put it) is an incoherent concept. — rlclauer
You do not "know" what is real, if you can only experience it subjectively. — rlclauer
If you do scientific testing, and continuously get the same result, you can conclude that there is probably a real property which is affecting this outcome. — rlclauer
I do not really know what you mean by "internal perspective" vs "external perspective." — rlclauer
In my opinion, there is your perspective, which is subjective and therefore fallible, and there is the world we inhabit, which seems to be real, and we have discerned some properties about this world, but the discovery of those properties requires placing a check on our subjectivity, namely the scientific method. — rlclauer
why do you conclude that freedom is incoherent because it can not physically manifest as freedom?
But I do experience freedom subjectively.
But scientific testing will only reveal causal connections, because causality is one of it's core assumptions. It only provides a constructed reality, albeit a very useful one.
In my internal experience, I have freedom. But from an external perspective, e.g. yours, there is only a causal chain of brain-states. The question is, why would we call one of these perspective an illusion?
I think there is a difference between having a subjective perspective on objects and experiencing yourself as a subject. The observer is not part of that which is observed.
I do not even know what this means, sorry. I am just a working class person, not a philosophy degree holder. — rlclauer
Ok thanks for explaining that. I would disagree with the characterization of the results of any scientific experiment being beholden to the subjectivity of the observer. I agree completely, what you experience has been structured by your brain, omitting certain information, and we are not really "seeing out there," but more or less "seeing" the model our brain creates. — rlclauer
That applies to your notion of free will also. The difference between your subjective experience of free will, and the subjective position of the observer relative to the scientific method, is repeatability, and physical analogues. — rlclauer
I do not think "causality" is just in your head, the same way free will is in your head, unless humans the world over have collectively hallucinated the reliability of things we have learned through science. — rlclauer
The will existing as an autonomous casual means in no way requires it to be separate from time itself. It acts in time, is constrained by it, and to say it is temporally displaced is nonsensical. — Pathogen
4.) Non-deterministic factors do exist in the physical universe. — Pathogen
That being the case, it is more apt to say, “freedom is the condition the will takes place under”, which still isn’t quite right, but is close enough to work with, and incorporates the added bonus of showing how and why free and freedom both are necessarily separated/displaced from will. Logically separated because free will is always susceptible to self-contradiction, and temporally displaced because freedom is always antecedent to the will for which it is the condition. — Mww
Why would it be a misnomer to talk about a flowing river? — Metaphysician Undercover
this does not mean that free will is temporally displaced — Metaphysician Undercover
The claim that free will is susceptible to self-contradiction represents a misunderstanding of free will. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can you explain how free will is repeatable? — rlclauer
By physical analogues, I mean we can have a theory for planetary motion, and then look through a telescope and see a physical analogue to the theory. — rlclauer
Could you please explain how it is not possible to know if causality is "how things really are?" — rlclauer
In my opinion, if you are going to be skeptical as to whether or not we are correctly perceiving reality, how can you not also be skeptical of your experience of free will? — rlclauer
The concept “flow” is a condition of the concept “river”, but it is not a necessary condition, for a river that does not flow, i.e., tidal access rivers, is still a river. — Mww
The concept “free will” is a misnomer, because a free will that is not free in its volitional determinations cannot be a “free will”, but nonetheless a will. — Mww
Freedom is an indirect condition of the will, insofar as it is a necessary condition for autonomy, which in its turn is the necessary condition for the will to operate in conformity to its prerogatives. Forgive me; I took liberties with the theoretical philosophy of morals by not specifying the distinction between conditions and necessary conditions. — Mww
I gave no indication that free will is displaced; I specifically itemized free as being separated from will. — Mww
This is nonsense, a tidal river still flows according to the direction of the tide. — Metaphysician Undercover
You seem to be suggesting that there is such a thing as a will which is not free, such that "free" is not a necessary condition of willing. How could that be, without accepting determinism. — Metaphysician Undercover
we must dispose of the idea that freedom is a necessary condition of will. — Metaphysician Undercover
C’mon, man, really? Nonsense? Look at what you wrote...river still flows according to the direction of the tide. If the tide is the major determinant factor, then the necessity resides in the tide, not the river, re: estuary. I can see one from my deck, complete with lobster boats. Navigational charts call it a river because shoreline proximity precludes calling it a bay, cove, inlet or sound. — Mww
Ahhh.....now we’re getting somewhere. There is a kind of determinism in play. Granting that a moral disposition is predicated on certain qualifications, whether innate genetically or instilled very early on from experience, then in order for proper moral agency to manifest, the agent must conform to whatever those qualifications happen to be. Hence, a form of determinism. It follows that the volitional determinations of the will must adhere to one’s moral disposition in accordance with his pre-established personal qualifications. Hence, a form of determinism. — Mww
All well and good, peachy, have a nice day.......right up until the will is called upon to determine a proper moral volition in direct conflict with a vested interest of the agent called upon to act. Here, the will is not free to relieve the conflict at the expense of the agent’s moral constitution. To do so is the epitome of immorality, which manifests in the agent as “guilty conscience”, “dishonor”, ill-will” and the like. And NOT....oh jeez, can you believe people actually think so???......as farging court appearance!!!!! (Gaspsputterchoke) ‘S-ok, though; they can’t separate ethics from morality either, so what can you expect? — Mww
but if you find no value in any of what’s been said, there’s no point in continuing, right? — Mww
We can choose to go against our moral disposition. This is called doing what one knows is wrong, and people do it commonly. — Metaphysician Undercover
Morality speaks to what is good, not what is right. What people commonly do that is not right is with respect to an objective want, called inclination, in opposition to cultural acceptance, thus not necessarily against moral disposition. What people much less commonly do that is not good is with respect to a subjective interest, called obligation, in opposition to moral law, which is very much so against moral disposition. — Mww
Moral law is the source of the form of determinism you said you don’t see. The laws conform to the agent’s innate qualifications, and determine one’s moral constitution, that which the will uses to formulate its volitions. — Mww
Now you leave "moral disposition" as meaningless. — Metaphysician Undercover
People behave in opposition to moral law, so moral law cannot act as a determinist force. — Metaphysician Undercover
People behave in opposition to moral law, — Metaphysician Undercover
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