I am not denying that I have a will. I am saying that my will is not free from determinants and constraints. — Truth Seeker
Well, that is a misunderstanding the concept free will, I am afraid. You have free will. — Corvus
Our choices can be voluntary but they are not free from determinants and constraints. — Truth Seeker
Those are not related to philosophical idea of free will. Constraints and determinants are the properties of your own being. They are not directly related to free will. — Corvus
Nothing can be illustrated by proposing a contradiction: 'if X was not X' is a contradiction. Unless of course you think there is a second thing that could 'be' either a person or possibly a tree or a shadow or whatever. Just trying to make syntactic sense of a comment like that. The wording implies a sort of bias of the existence of something that you are 'being', the same sort of implication of the lyrics "I wish that I could be Richard Corey" (Simon & Garfunkel), the latter of whom is a reasonably close neighbor of mine.For example, if I had the genes of a banana tree — Truth Seeker
Better example. Not sure what it illustrates, but at least it's not a contradiction. The point being made is still illusive. Your choices are a product of those variables, yes. It is also a product of your reasoning, which is the variable that makes you responsible for them and doesn't make the shadow responsible for depriving a plant of sunlight.If aliens kidnapped me when I was a baby and placed on the surface of Venus, I would have died from the heat.
Unclear question. Are you asking if determinism is the case, and therefore the choice made (I don't believe there is a 'the past' as distinct from 'not the past') is an inevitability of some initial state of the universe? Or are you perhaps asking if the agent that makes a different choice is still considered to be the same agent as yourself? Or asking something entirely different?Could anyone have made a different choice in the past than the ones they made? — Truth Seeker
Apparently many words only apply to humans and not anything else when doing the exact same thing. — noAxioms
Calculating (pondering, whatever) is part of the process leading to the eventual choice. — noAxioms
The racists used the same tactic to imply that people not 'them' were inferior. — noAxioms
The OP doesn't mention the word 'free' at all, but does mention "could have done otherwise" which is an informal alternate definition of it. — noAxioms
If I had the genes, environments, nutrients, and experiences that you have, would I not have typed your post and vice versa? — Truth Seeker
Yes, they are. The second meaning of 'free will' is the "freedom of humans to make choices that are not determined by prior causes". — Truth Seeker
is that what your first reply did? It didn't look like it was looking at ANY possible answers — flannel jesus
Genes, environments and nutrients are not philosophical concepts. They are the concepts in Genetics, Sociology and Biology, which has nothing to do with philosophical ideas. — Corvus
I have proposed a small list of definitions of 'free choice' as distinct from choice that isn't free. I've also claimed at least 4 different kinds of determinism, but have not listed them in this topic. You've not clarified which ones are what you're talking about or not. — noAxioms
Sure options are real. Have you ever been in a labyrinth? — MoK
Then you can always choose to do otherwise if you agree that options are real. The example of a maze is one. Think of a situation in which you have plenty of money but you are unsure about investing in the market. There are many examples in our lives in which we are unsure about the situations. This means that options in such situations are real so you can always choose to do otherwise.I agree that options are real. I have been in mazes but not labyrinths. — Truth Seeker
I suppose. A frog (or a banana) would have made different choices, even if positing if some sort of 'I' was one of those things makes no sense at all.We make voluntary choices (e.g. my choice to post on this forum was voluntary) but we don't make choices that are free from determinants and constraints (e.g. my choice to post on this forum was both determined and constrained by my genes, environments, nutrients, and experiences). Do you understand what I have said? — Truth Seeker
I actually came up with six, but the first four are the important ones.Please tell me more about the 4 different kinds of determinism. Thank you.
But you're implying that it must be the case that it is fundamentally different when you say "I see calling what the program does “choosing” as personifying the program". That was what I was balking at. Empirically, if I cannot see my opponent, I cannot tell if I am playing a human or not (hence 'doing the exact same thing'), so the usage of the word 'choose' is appropriate in either case.how can anyone say this yet to be determined thing called “choosing” is “doing the exact same thing” as anything else? — Fire Ologist
All true of yourself as well. Besides, most chess playing programs don't move physical pieces, and if they do, it's an add-on (a sort of assistant), not part of the process doing the choosing (wow, just like yourself again).In order for the program to make a move, it needs to have been given its programming; there need be no agent inserted into the program so that the chess pieces move.
Ah, so 'agency' is another one of these anthropomorphic words that is forbidden to other entities. I cannot base logic on such biases.Maybe the same is true for people. But then there is no such thing as choosing (because there is no agency).
Agree. The choice seems to be the result, possibly the output of the process, especially when it is cleanly delimited such as a chess move. A machine could choose not to display its choice of move, but that would be a bad choice since it would lose, so it seems optimal in most cases to make the move quickly. I can think of exceptions to that, but they're rare. A human is more likely to make that choice than a machine. I even witnessed exactly that a couple days ago.When a program is done calculating, it has no choice but to display the answer or make the move. Choice is something else than the calculations that might precede it.
Of course. You chose your definition that way.I still don’t see a distinction between what a choice is, and what a free choice is.
Ah, you use the word 'free' despite the word having no distinct meaning to you. Why didn't you just say "we must be an agent'? You already put that word on the human-only list above. Now you say 'free agent' like that is distinct from just 'agent'. Be a little consistent if you're going to take this stanceBut if we have the ability to make a choice, we must be a free agent in some sense.
The choice seems to be the result — noAxioms
I still don’t see a distinction between what a choice is, and what a free choice is.
Of course. You chose your definition that way. — noAxioms
my thoughts are, they could have made a different choice if they counterfactually had wanted to. — flannel jesus
Do you think your view needs justification? If so, would you share it? — frank
Of course we don't have the straight-forward ability to test our counterfactual statements about this world, but it doesn't seem remarkably controversial to me. In fact it's part of every-day speech for most people. "That wouldn't have happened if such-and-such". — flannel jesus
just imagine a universe that started last Thursday.
One could also imagine a godlike figure reaching in and changing a couple individual things — flannel jesus
I agree that options are real. I have been in mazes but not labyrinths.
— Truth Seeker
Then you can always choose to do otherwise if you agree that options are real. The example of a maze is one. Think of a situation in which you have plenty of money but you are unsure about investing in the market. There are many examples in our lives in which we are unsure about the situations. This means that options in such situations are real so you can always choose to do otherwise.
6 hours ago — MoK
... and also not free of consequences. :100:Our choices can be voluntary but they are not free from determinants and constraints. — Truth Seeker
Our choices can be voluntary but they are not free from determinants and constraints.
— Truth Seeker
... and also not free of consequences. :100: — 180 Proof
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