Desire: in general, a subject's capacity to become, by means of his ideas, the cause of the actual existence of the objects of those ideas. — Mww
I can only desire something that is feasible? — Quk
one can desire in accordance with whatever idea crosses his mind — Mww
1. Trigger. A sudden craving for cheese vs. seeing a piece of cheese and wanting to eat it. The object triggers the situational instance of will/desire, vs. something else (some association? a random firing of neurons?) triggers the will/desire. — Dawnstorm
someone can of course have reasons for choosing something that isn't their preference. — flannel jesus
Choosing the cake that no one wants, that you don't need, that you think will taste horrible, that you are told not to choose, that will kill you, and without any need to choose anything at all - choosing that cake, can only be an act of freedom. — Fire Ologist
There's always a cause or a reason for a decision. It's impossible to inhibit all causes and reasons of the universe. — Quk
The conclusion here is that there are gradations of free will, of choice, from particular to absolute, depending on our preferences/values.
Is this a good analysis? — bert1
uh no not necessarily. someone can of course have reasons for choosing something that isn't their preference. — flannel jesus
So my desire is predicated on the assumption that ecclesiastical cakes and my tastes are predictable and consistent. {I decided to leave that autocorrection just for fun} In other words, desire presumes determinism. — unenlightened
The particulars here, seem to be in decisions made from past experiences. In your example the choice was made by a past decision. — DifferentiatingEgg
But perhaps something occurs that makes you change that decision. Like some Icecream is 400 calories per serving, some are 100 calories per serving. You may decide that from now on you want to try something with less calories. So you update a decision preference. To decide means to kill off other options.
Where as true spontaneous choice in the matter requires us to be free from preformed decisions.
The idea is that our choices are determined, but the thing that determines them can range from the particular to the universal. — bert1
The only possibility for freedom seems to be a freedom created from nothing. — Fire Ologist
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