There is nothing to understand. You are writing gibberish about free will and Gödel. — Lionino
https://arxiv.org/pdf/1401.1800
Gödel, Tarski, Turing and the conundrum of free will
Free will exists relative to a base theory if there is freedom to deviate from the deterministic or indeterministic dynamics in the theory ...
Denial or acceptance doesn't change anything. If you believe in free will, you can rationalize and justify your actions; if you don't, you can excuse yourself on those grounds. The benefits are either available or not; they're neither gained nor lost through belief.If you deny freedom, then you excuse yourself from responsibility for everything that freedom implies, but also forgo whatever benefits it confers. — Pantagruel
By the fact your conscious awareness, which is only in the top 10% of the brain, doesn't know all the processes that lead to a decision, only the final result. Yes, it's 'you' deciding, but you can't have decided differently.
It doesn't matter. We feel as if, think as if and act as if we were making original, independent decisions, so we may as well believe it.
Given this, we can conclude we could have acted differently for the simple reason we are not limited to only one act. — NOS4A2
To the degree you (we) are not coerced by other agents or constrained by either internal and/or external conditions, you (we) "have" free actions.Do I have free will? — kindred
How many of those have you committed in the past second? Each of your reasoned decisions can only result in one action.You aren’t limited to one act. At each moment there are an unfathomable series of acts being committed. — NOS4A2
Prove it. We simply cannot know from internal experience what confluence of factors caused all the previous experiences.In one case the basic biology and metaphysics is dead wrong. Nothing else determines one’s actions. — NOS4A2
I feel like this is perhaps the area of philosophy most rife with confusion. How exactly would "undetermined" actions be free? If a choice is "determined by nothing" then it is essentially arbitrary and random and in no sense would such a choice be "ours." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Given this, we can conclude we could have acted differently for the simple reason we are not limited to only one act.
— NOS4A2
In any given situation, you are, quite literally limited to only one act. — Vera Mont
Sure events are rewritten in partisan histories, time travel stories and human memories. I've never seen it in a chemical reaction; thus remain unswayed. — Vera Mont
The bottom-up causality of nonlinear far from equilibrium dynamics is thus truly creative; it produces qualitatively different wholes that are not reducible to sums, compounds, or aggregates. Once self-organized, furthermore, these emergent global structures of process actively and dynamically influence the go of their components, but not qua other. In contradiction to the received views on causality, that is, the whole also actively exerts causal power on itself top down. Self-organization, in short, strongly counsels for a wider denotation for the
term cause, one reconceptualized in terms of “context-sensitive constraints” to include those causal powers that incorporate circular causality, context-sensitive
embeddedness, and temporality. On this interpretation deterministic, mechanistic efficient causes become the limit of context-sensitive constraints.
But how would the defeat of physical cause and effect by a mind so detached from the world it knew nothing in itself, set one free in the physical world? — Fire Ologist
Looking at the level of global self-organizing processes of a living system will reveal a non-linear reciprocal causality that moves between the global and the elemental. — Joshs
If the mental NEVER has causal efficacy then it can never affect behavior and so natural selection can never select on the contents of phenomenal awareness. At the same time, "mental phenomena," would apparently be the lone, totally sui generis thing in our universe that exists but is causally insignificant. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But Hume and Kant showed there is no cause and effect - they are just constructions that might have nothing to do with the world in itself.
A better question is: have you been able to shape your world so that it's a paradise you roam in? Or is it a hell you constantly fight against? — frank
Seems to me I can control what I can or can’t do or decide to do or not do in the future. For example I did not shoplift today — kindred
suggest there is emerging a general consensus among active inference and 4EA researchers in cognitive neuroscience concerning the embodied , embedded and non-representational nature of consciousness and affectivity — Joshs
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