"Every determination of choice proceeds from the representation of a possible action to the deed through the feeling of pleasure or displeasure, taking an interest in the action or its effect.” — TimeLine
Preferences or strong desires (e.g. addictions) influence but do not dictate choices, as do innumerable other influences. Habits (memory) are influencers but they are not what chooses. — Rich
I am not not sure if I understand this. Does it exclude instinct? Are cats and dogs capable of choices? If it's based on pleasure and displeasure why is it important if it's represented or immediate? The source of the action seems to be the same. — mew
A 'choice' must be rational, thus cats and dogs are not capable of choice but are purely instinctual. The decision to act with reason irrelevant to the pleasure or displeasure that it will produce and that therein contains no instinctual influence can be considered an actual choice. Choice must always reflect what is moral. — TimeLine
Hi! What counts as a choice? Are our preferences chosen by us? If they are, based on what do we choose our preferences? If they are not, are the things we choose -based on our preferences- chosen? — mew
To me it seems obvious that people have "difficulty'' answering your question - I'm no exception.
What I'd like to say is that there's a certain impossibility that bears upon the question - it is impossible to discover the extent of the influence both external and internal factors have on what is the act of choosing. The problem of free will has no easy solution. We may speculate though. I'm open to that but then it's just my word against someone elses. — TheMadFool
I don't think we have any difficulty answering Mew's question, we just have difficulty agreeing. — T Clark
And then you brought free will into it. — T Clark
Isn't that what the OP had in mind? Where else does choice have relevance? — TheMadFool
There's no correct answer to Mew's queries. In other words it's just a matter of opinion and speculation. Isn't that why there's ''difficulty agreeing''? — TheMadFool
A choice can perhaps be a decision that contains an absence of an impulse or instinctual drive that mechanically pulls us to act without reason in order to immediately satisfy and it needn't only be sexual or aggressive. It is acting without reason; the autonomy to reason is acting without being enslaved to our impulses. A choice must therefore be wholly moral, something peculiar only to those who possess it. "Every determination of choice proceeds from the representation of a possible action to the deed through the feeling of pleasure or displeasure, taking an interest in the action or its effect.” — TimeLine
Nothing rational took place because it was instinctual. Your decision was propelled by an impulse but a rational choice to eat foods that contains the highest nutrients for optimal health and the required energy to sustain you despite the taste is an actual choice. — TimeLine
I hear you talk, but I do not hear you saying very much - you seem very adept at hiding behind your words - obfuscation. Are you saying we choose without reason or our choices are moral? Try and be clear - stop trying to impress us with your words - impress us with a clear reason. — woodart
↪T Clark Nothing rational took place because it was instinctual. Your decision was propelled by an impulse but a rational choice to eat foods that contains the highest nutrients for optimal health and the required energy to sustain you despite the taste is an actual choice. — TimeLine
I hear you talk, but I do not hear you saying very much - you seem very adept at hiding behind your words - obfuscation. Are you saying we choose without reason or our choices are moral? Try and be clear - stop trying to impress us with your words - impress us with a clear reason. — woodart
Hi! What counts as a choice? Are our preferences chosen by us? If they are, based on what do we choose our preferences? If they are not, are the things we choose -based on our preferences- chosen?
Isn't choice primarily about the future (repetition is about the past), what we anticipate will happen when we act in a certain manner. We negate the present transforming it into the future as it were a completed action (as past). The force of that negation is the willing ego. — Cavacava
Please clarify. Are you saying my decision to eat shrimp rather than pizza is not a choice? That only "rational choices" are really choices? How many of the situations in our lives where we have to pick between two or more options are what you call "actual choices?" — T Clark
What percentage of the actions you take in life do you think are rational? — T Clark
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