Many would say then that you believe in Free Will. But anyway, I agree on the unprovability of these metaphysical beliefs. The thing is that what we can rigorously prove is quite limited. However if and when we make models about reality, why not use them?Determinism is an unprovable metaphysical belief, just as FreeWill is. So I freely choose to believe that when I drive my car I am in command, not the laws of nature or sparking neurons. — Gnomon
I agree with this. But there are some questions.In my view both are very useful concepts. I will argue that you can have determinism and free will. Free will is a great concept to use as it easy describing various events and phenomena extremely well. Yet so is determinism too. — ssu
I think it would be productive for this thread if either you or anyone gives the most compelling case just why they cannot be both at the same time. Even if one doesn't personally agree with the argument.There's been a lot of discussion of that possibility, but I haven't seen anything that really resolves the differences between them. — Ludwig V
Can you be more specific what this means?There's either freedom in the gaps or reduction of freedom to causality. — Ludwig V
Fair summary. You believe agency and physicalism are mutually exclusive. I don't agree.R: "We are the product of physical interactions, which are determined entirety by the laws of physics, and none of our choices could ever have been, or ever will be, other than exactly what they were, or will be. But we have agency."
P: "Something that is entirely governed by physical determinism cannot have agency. They are mutually exclusive. How could that be possible?"
R: "It is possible. We are governed by physical determinism, but we are autonomous."
P: "You have given different wording for 'agency,' but you have not explained how it is possible for something ruled by physical determinism to have it."
R: "But if it is true, then we can be ruled by determinism, yet make independent choices."
P: "But what reason do we have to think it is possible?" — Patterner
I agree with your Both/And conclusion. My latest BothAnd Blog post is on the topic of Synchrony*1. The author of the 2003 book SYNCH, Steven Strogatz, says "These, then, are the defining features of chaos : erratic, seemingly random behavior in an otherwise deterministic system ; predictability in the short run, because of deterministic laws ; and unpredictability in the long run, because of the butterfly effect*2." The physical universe is an almost infinite system of malleable Matter and deterministic Thermodynamic laws that is also chaotic at the core, but with pockets of sublime order, such as our own blue planet. which defies the destiny of Entropy with emergent Life & Mind.In my view both are very useful concepts. I will argue that you can have determinism and free will. Free will is a great concept to use as it easy describing various events and phenomena extremely well. Yet so is determinism too. What we have is logical limitations in understanding a deterministic reality, making predictions about it or calculating what will happen. — ssu
Yes. Causal Closure (Determinism) was a simplifying assumption of 17th century physics. But 20th century physics has complicated the math with non-linear Chaos, and causal Uncertainty at the physical roots of reality. :smile:↪Gnomon
Thanks for the link to Bishop's review. Bishop's most salient point is that physicalism is inconstent with libertarian free will (LFW) because of Jaegwon Kim's causal closure argument. — Relativist
Thanks for the invitation. I can try. But as long as people think that the search for free will is the search for an uncaused cause or a search for indeterminacy, I doubt that anyone will be interested.I think it would be productive for this thread if either you or anyone gives the most compelling case just why they cannot be both at the same time. Even if one doesn't personally agree with the argument. — ssu
The logical limitations start from what we can calculate and prove. What you are describing is more physical limitations that we notice in our empirical tests.The "logical limitations" can be observed in physical Phase Transitions, where a stable organization of molecules can suddenly transform from one structural state (water) to another (ice), but scientists can't follow the steps in between. — Gnomon
I'm not so sure about this in a time when algorithms rule our lives and data mining and big data is extremely popular.The basics, which I confess I though were universally known are that actions performed by people require for their explanation purposes, values and reasons. Values cannot be recognized in standard scientific determinism, because of the fact/value distinction. — Ludwig V
Well I can easily confuse reason with causes.Reasons are easily confused with causes, but they justify actions by linking the aim, purpose, ambition, goal or target of action to what is to be done (this is sometimes referred to as the practical syllogism) which is a form of explanation that has no role in causal determinism. — Ludwig V
The "Logical Limitation" I referred to is both a measurement problem and a modeling problem. And the Logic in both cases is Mathematical (1+2+X=?), not necessarily physical*1. The physics happens, presumably according to the rules of physics and logic. But the steps between phases are hidden in a fog of Chaos. :smile:The "logical limitations" can be observed in physical Phase Transitions, where a stable organization of molecules can suddenly transform from one structural state (water) to another (ice), but scientists can't follow the steps in between. — Gnomon
The logical limitations start from what we can calculate and prove. What you are describing is more physical limitations that we notice in our empirical tests.
The logical part here is of course when a measurement effects what is being measured. This is something that isn't at all trivial. And then there's things that you simply cannot model in a laboratory. — ssu
But this is a bit of chicken and an egg: the causal determinist will simply say that a person, thanks to his thinking, reasoning and experience came to this conclusion because of the current situation that was can be traced to the past occurences, which can be then traced back to, well, the Big Bang. — ssu
Yes, that's a classic example of what dictionaries can do, otherwise known as a circular definition. I believe it is somewhat frowned upon in philosophical circles. Fortunately, we are free to disagree with a dictionary, even if we have to be a bit cautious about it. It doesn't make it easier to articulate what's going on here.In fact, when doing a quick search on the definitions of reason and cause, I got:
reason: a cause, explanation, or justification for an action or event.
cause: a reason for an action or condition : motive, something that brings about an effect or a result, a person or thing that is the occasion of an action or state — ssu
Yes, that's a classic example of what dictionaries can do, otherwise known as a circular definition. I believe it is somewhat frowned upon in philosophical circles. Fortunately, we are free to disagree with a dictionary, even if we have to be a bit cautious about it. It doesn't make it easier to articulate what's going on here. — Ludwig V
Thinking and reasoning itself actually isn't so much about using the scientific method. The scientific method is really just a bigger method: it's about how you try to experiment or prove your thinking/hypothesis. Of course sometimes people can be in the happy situation that while studying something else or doing an experiment, they just stumble something they have no clue what it is and where it came from. That's then notice to try to figure what it is, or have you simply made an error.But I really don't think that my "thinking, reasoning and experience " is particularly amenable to the scientific method (methods, approach). — Ludwig V
You are quite right. But it's not often that I come across such egregious examples.Expecting more of a dictionary would be a mistake. A dictionary is limited to describing words with other words - there's inevitable circularity to it. There's something of a Munchausen Trilemma involved in writing a book full of words describing other words. — flannel jesus
Dear, oh, dear. I thought it was the causal determinist who was guilty of scientism. I'm more than happy to insist that the methods (and concepts) of science do not apply when thinking about thinking. It's not really a strictly a question of logic, but of a more general conception of rationality. Or, put it another way, of a different kind of syllogism (though it was also invented by Aristotle) known as the practical syllogism.Now you go too far with applying the scientific method and hold a bit extreme views of scientism, but this usually comes from that the person doesn't understand that other fields do use logic too. — ssu
I see it the other way around. If choices are made because of the physical interactions of all the constituent parts of the brain (whether considered at the level of particles, atoms, molecules, cells, neurons, brain areas, or whatever), due to the properties and laws of physics, and no choice could ever have been/be other than it was/will be, then what is the definition of Free Will that allows for choices to be made freely? Free from what? Other than our awareness of the whole thing, which a boulder lacks, in what way is a path taken for such causes by a person who comes to an intersection different from a path taken by a boulder rolling down a mountain?There's been a lot of discussion of that possibility, but I haven't seen anything that really resolves the differences between them.
— Ludwig V
I think it would be productive for this thread if either you or anyone gives the most compelling case just why they cannot be both at the same time. Even if one doesn't personally agree with the argument. — ssu
.I see it the other way around. If choices are made because of the physical interactions of all the constituent parts of the brain (whether considered at the level of particles, atoms, molecules, cells, neurons, brain areas, or whatever), due to the properties and laws of physics, and no choice could ever have been/be other than it was/will be, then what is the definition of Free Will that allows for choices to be made freely? Free from what? Other than our awareness of the whole thing, which a boulder lacks, in what way is a path taken for such causes by a person who comes to an intersection different from a path taken by a boulder rolling down a mountain? — Patterner
Free from what? Other than our awareness of the whole thing, which a boulder lacks, in what way is a path taken for such causes by a person who comes to an intersection different from a path taken by a boulder rolling down a mountain? — Patterner
Umm... you answered the question yourself: our awareness of the whole thing. That's it. — ssu
Yes, but in order to be "free to act on the desires and decisions of that machine", which is yourself, you have to have the awareness that you are making a choice / decision. Awareness, consciousness, subjectivity are essential to understand free will.For the sake of argument, if one imagines a human mind as a "decision-making machine", then the freedom of the will is "free to act on the desires and decisions of that machine", in particular as opposed to "forced to act on the desires and decisions of other machines. — flannel jesus
We started this discussion because you said:-I think it would be productive for this thread if either you or anyone gives the most compelling case just why they cannot be both at the same time. Even if one doesn't personally agree with the argument. — ssu
I think I may have interpreted this in a way different from you. It's complicated. You can't play both language-games at the same time, any more than you can play chess and draughts ("checkers" in the USA, I think) at the same time. The tricky bit is that, while there is no problem about playing both those games on the same board, there does seem to be a problem about playing both language games in the same world. Moreover, while I would like to say that it is just a question of how you consider or articulate the phenomena, I don't think it is as simple as that. So I think there is scope and need to see if some bridges might not be built. But we might need to revise the rules of both games.In my view both are very useful concepts. I will argue that you can have determinism and free will. — ssu
The person who comes down the mountain is not in a free fall, as the boulder is - though they might be. Their descent is under control. It's not about which path they take.in what way is a path taken for such causes by a person who comes to an intersection different from a path taken by a boulder rolling down a mountain? — Patterner
I'm not at all sure this is relevant for our problem. In the first place, the billiard balls can travel along paths they have never travelled before. In the second place, if we are only free when we innovate, then we are in chains for most of our lives.You can even innovate, do really something that hasn't been there before in your mind. — ssu
I don't disagree, but I do wish we could stop talking about free will, with all its baggage, and concentrate on freedom.But for entities that are conscious and sentient, free will is a really great model to use! — ssu
You can even innovate, do really something that hasn't been there before in your mind. — ssu
Then I have to remind about the problem that LD had in predicting the future. I don't think LD has any problem in predicting billiard balls as they follow exceptionally well even Newtonian physics. Yet LD has a problem of making an equation when the future depends on his equation, especially the negation of it.I'm not at all sure this is relevant for our problem. In the first place, the billiard balls can travel along paths they have never travelled before. In the second place, if we are only free when we innovate, then we are in chains for most of our lives. — Ludwig V
I think was arguing for compatibility of natural human FreeWill, not as an abnormal exception to Causation, but as a statistical option within causal Determinism. Not for supernatural freedom from Causation, as in the ex nihilo Big Bang Theory. Compatibility does not require total chaotic indeterminism, but only a few short-cuts on the road to destiny.Thanks for the invitation. I can try. But as long as people think that the search for free will is the search for an uncaused cause or a search for indeterminacy, I doubt that anyone will be interested. — Ludwig V
Quite so. Only, if at all possible, I would like to be regarded as only coerced by the law when I do so. Keeping the law means that one could break it.Large societies need predictability, for example when driving in traffic, I think everybody is happy if you predictably stay on your own lane. — ssu
Well, that might be right. Though I would be a bit concerned if people who did not understand Godel were then to be classified as not free.It's been long argued starting from J.R. Lucas (1961) and then continued with Penrose that human mind is different because we can understand Gödel's incompleteness theorems and computers cannot, but that argument is a confusing. — ssu
But the billiard balls do not roll as they do because LD predicted how they would.I don't think LD has any problem in predicting billiard balls as they follow exceptionally well even Newtonian physics. — ssu
Well, yes. I think feedback loops are an important part of enabling us to control our actions and hence act freely.Yet LD has a problem of making an equation when the future depends on his equation, especially the negation of it. — ssu
I get the first half of the sentence. But the meaning of the second half is not at all clear to me. Your diagram in your "Small world model" doesn't help.Compatibility does not require total chaotic indeterminism, but only a few short-cuts on the road to destiny. — Gnomon
Are you suggesting that an imagined freedom is any substitute for the real thing? Seems like a very poor exchange to me.Our physical actions may not be free, but our meta-physical intentions are free as a bird, to defy gravity by flapping. "If god intended man to fly, he would have given him wings". Instead, he gave us imagination. — Gnomon
No, it is not the case that the man is not free just because he can be imprisoned. If he is not imprisoned, he is free. In case, the freedom to "roam the world of ideas" is no substitute for the freedom to go home to you partner and kids.Note --- The man is not free --- he can be imprisoned --- but his mind is free : to roam the world of ideas. — Gnomon
So an action is free if its causes are inside the agent. If the causes of those causes are outside the agent, can we conclude that his acts of will, etc are not free?3) the causes of voluntary behaviour are certain states, events, or conditions within the agent: acts of will or volitions, choices, decisions, desires etc... — The Chapter you cited entitled Compatibilism
So compatibilism is window dressing - a concession to the ignorant. Why would I be interested in this?Compatibilism is determinism with a slight modification for the sake of appearances and for our language use. It is a position taken because of the perceived need to have some idea of accountability or responsibility for human behavior. — The Chapter you cited entitled Compatibilism
It's about whether or not I can actually choose one path or another. As opposed to having multiple paths in front of me, but there being no possibility of choosing any but one. If I have no possibility of choosing any but one, despite others being just as available, then I do not have free will. And that's fine. I'm not arguing. It's a perfectly legitimate stance. (Although I disagree with it.) I'm just saying that you can't have no ability to choose any but one of multiple equally possible paths and have free will in the matter.The person who comes down the mountain is not in a free fall, as the boulder is - though they might be. Their descent is under control. It's not about which path they take. — Ludwig V
Coercion usually means forcing someone to do something he or she doesn't want to do.When, exactly can someone who is capable of being free be said to be coerced? — Ludwig V
That kind of idea of determinism does away with lot of things. Anyway, if we want to hear some who thinks that with determinism there's no free will, then there's for example Susan Hossenfelder:As the sun rises over the horizon, is it appropriate to say that the air is coerced to become hotter? If determinism excludes the possibility of freedom, as it seems to, then it also excludes the possibility of coercion. — Ludwig V
Yes.But the billiard balls do not roll as they do because LD predicted how they would. — Ludwig V
That little word actually is interesting. What does it mean? Either I have a choice, or I do not.It's about whether or not I can actually choose one path or another. — Patterner
In one way, you are right. But there are some kinds of coercion that are compatible with the capacity to choose. Determinism eliminates the capacity to choose, and so eliminates the possibility of coercion.I'm just saying that you can't have no ability to choose any but one of multiple equally possible paths and have free will in the matter. — Patterner
Quite so. Does the sun want to rise in the morning?Coercion usually means forcing someone to do something he or she doesn't want to do. — ssu
Interesting. Is that because she thinks that determinism forces me to do things, or because choice is meaningless in a determinist framework?Finally on 12:20 she explains why she believes that determinism eliminates free will. — ssu
Yes. That means that the prediction does not force me to do anything.In many occasion giving a prediction doesn't affect what is predicted. That the Earth revolves around the Sun even a hundred years from now is a sound prediction. Giving that doesn't effect the future, the Earth or the Sun. — ssu
Yes, it is a category error. I'm not sure about emergent properties. There doesn't seem to be much agreement about them and maybe those arguments are giving too much away. Yet we are physical beings, and physics doesn't have exceptions. Understanding that is the problem.Yet they disregard then the "more is different" argument, the emergent properties, and make simply a category error. — ssu
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.