So he goes directly diagonally. The covering is removed. Only his diagonal path is black. The remainder of the field has been painted white. Did he have free will, or not?Logically, he would go directly diagonally across the field. Being tired he decides not to exercise his free will as to another path. I don't get it. — jgill
I wonder if a fundamental cause of the controversies is that the concept of free will is poorly defined.
That's right, the example is nonsense, because it has not been proven that the perfect prediction of an individual's actions which is described by the example, is even possible. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the question Art48 is really asking is whether free will is compatible with determinism, and the answer is no it is not. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, surely it's possible just by pure chance. If I asked a hundred people to guess a number between 1-100, I might guess the number they guessed correctly once or twice - that's not impossible by any means. He didn't really clarify how the painter got it right, he just said he got it right. — flannel jesus
Or alternatively the answer might be yes it is. — flannel jesus
I wonder if a fundamental cause of the controversies is that the concept of free will is poorly defined. — Art48
So, do you believe that the man in the OP does not have free will? At the moment, the poll is 80% does not have free will and 20% other.No, the reason is that people cannot cope with the fact that we don't have free will. — Christoffer
Models of causality that are "compatibilist" are those which appear to be retro-causal due to rejecting the antecedent-precedent distinction. — sime
So, do you believe that the man in the OP does not have free will? At the moment, the poll is 80% does not have free will and 20% other. — Art48
Not poorly, but not universally, unanimously. You can see already from people's definitions of "free will" or from the experiments with which they propose to test it, whether they believe it exists or not. Libet, for example, makes absurd demands on what a will would need to be like in order to be free.I wonder if a fundamental cause of the controversies is that the concept of free will is poorly defined. — Art48
But the field had already been painted. From an objective viewpoint, how could the man have truly been free? — Art48
I wonder if a fundamental cause of the controversies is that the concept of free will is poorly defined — Art48
Remove your body from the equation and tell me how well you will. Also record us your will typing out your reply free from your body. — Vaskane
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