Well, there's other stuff at play. Stupidity and ignorance limit the range of freedom to choose. So do physical constraints and emotional entanglements. Sometimes the choice as we perceive it is not the real choice available, and sometimes reason is the least significant factor in a decision.If we had free will it seems like we wouldn’t make so many bad choices. — praxis
I would hope they would be in conflict, just as is the case with contemporary philosophical positions. It’s nice to have so many alternatives to choose from. But that diversity seems to bother you, as though you need a consensus of significant size in order to take a theory seriously.These theories are also often in conflict to some extent.
— Count Timothy von Icarus
In a mature fields, people don't announce a new paradigm shift every year or so—evolutionary biology for example has one major power struggle that has slowly built around the same lines for decades now. — Count Timothy von Icarus
TBH, I think the isomorphisms are more due to everyone working off the same suggestive research findings than all of these sharing some sort of deep connection. — Count Timothy von Icarus
while I find this area interesting, I'm not sure it's a particularly profitable way to analyze freedom. I think it's enough to point out that an explanation of consciousness where our experiences and volitions have no causal role in our behavior faces a host of issues and shouldn't be assumed. Attempts to describe awareness in terms of neurology themselves seem prone to slipping into the mistake of positing that "brains = minds," which in turn abstracts the enviornment out of the analysis. But brains won't produce any conciousness if placed into the vast majority of environments that exist in the universe (e.g. the bottom of the sea or the surface of a star). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Mental life is also bodily life and is situated in the world. The roots of mental life lie not simply in the brain, but ramify through the body and environment. Our mental lives involve our body and the world beyond the surface membrane of our organism, and therefore cannot be reduced simply to brain processes inside the head.
Seems to me I can control what I can or can’t do or decide to do or not do in the future. — kindred
Isn’t our will not free because of limits, constraints, and entanglements? — praxis
I have no faith in the freedom of will, but I live as if it were a constant reality - because: What are the options? — Vera Mont
Doesn't the condition that there is no free-will exclude the possibility of the instrumentality of belief, and therefore of knowledge? And yet knowledge clearly has instrumental value. — Pantagruel
Finally, what is the motivation for even asking the question? The only one that I can think of is "denial of responsibility for the consequences of ones' actions." — Pantagruel
Good and successful ones as well as bad. And everyone else's. There is no advantage to be gained.Finally, what is the motivation for even asking the question? The only one that I can think of is "denial of responsibility for the consequences of ones' actions." — Pantagruel
What would free will look like then? — Igitur
Free will is about possibility. If you're going to make a choice, there must be multiple possibilities, as if time is a branching thing and you can choose the path you'll take. — frank
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incompatibilism
Incompatibilism is the view that the thesis of determinism is logically incompatible with the classical thesis of free will.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predeterminism
Predeterminism is the philosophy that all events of history, past, present and future, have been already decided or are already known (by God, fate, or some other force), including human actions.
Are you suggesting that we ignore scientific approaches that aren’t ‘mature’?
What's instrumental value? Could you give an example? — frank
I would ask someone who believes you don't have free will "What is stopping your will from being free? — Igitur
I would ask someone who believes you don't have free will "What is stopping your will from being free? What is stopping you from making the choices you want to make? The fact that many factors determine the choice you will end up making?" — Igitur
The evidence is so overwhelmingly on the side of freedom of will (it is the basis of all law, qua responsibility for actions, which is the foundation of civilization) — Pantagruel
Sure. If you know Archimedes principle of the lever then you can lift something you otherwise couldn't. Practical knowledge is inherently instrumental. In doing so, it creates a greater "degree of freedom" in the system - i.e. it expands the phase space of the system that includes it. — Pantagruel
Doesn't that seem circular to you? The proof for free will is in the institutions predicated on the presumption of free will. — Vera Mont
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