I don’t quite follow this. The act of choosing must either have some cause or no cause. You suggest in this example that the choice has some cause, and that the being of volition is itself the cause?Entropymancer said:We could just as well imagine spirits of pure volition, which are free to act but are not acted upon or operated by cause and effect or other mechanistic influences (for example the Cartesian "mind"). In this case your tautology holds true -- something causes choice -- but its conclusion does not. In this case, "something" could in fact the agency in question. It causes its own choices, and thus has free will. Is there an aspect to your argument which I'm not grasping?
benzyme said:but yea..i agree, free will is not exactly free.
as do I. there's absolutely no evidence to support that theory.Global said:I don't think it's as polarizing as we have free will or we don't have free will. I think we have a degree of free will which can and is often affected by outside forces, but it's not like every single action in history was predetermined. I think that's nonsense.
gibran2 said:I don’t understand this. Are you saying that our behavior would be different without free will? Would we feel differently? Would we act differently? Would our love and appreciation of life be in any way diminished? I honestly don’t see how things would be different.
Isn’t it anthropocentric to assign free will to human beings, yet not assign it to, for example, a flower? Or a cloud?
Everything happens as it happens. The universe eternally unfolds, and we are a part of that eternal unfolding. There is a mysterious joy that comes with knowing this. The concept of “free will” stands in opposition to this unfolding – it suggests that we can be contrary to or resist the eternal unfolding. It separates us from the unity of existence. There is no free will because there is no need for free will. The universe has no need for it.
Well, yes. If we're considering whether a being has free will, and the being itself is the cause in its own choices, then doesn't that constitute free will?gibran2 said:All you seem to be doing is identifying the source of the cause.
I agree that a being of pure volition could have itself as a source of cause, but the fact that a cause is necessary to the effect of a choice rules out “free” choice. The being of pure volition must resort to a cause to produce an effect. And unless there is no relationship between causes and effects, then a particular cause must be invoked to produce a particular effect. How is any of that free?
Quite correct. There is no evidence that the universe is deterministic. To the contrary, there is ample evidence that the universe is not deterministic.benzyme said:as do I. there's absolutely no evidence to support that theory.Global said:I don't think it's as polarizing as we have free will or we don't have free will. I think we have a degree of free will which can and is often affected by outside forces, but it's not like every single action in history was predetermined. I think that's nonsense.
The problem is when you say its actions “are determined only by its own volition”. What does that mean? What leads the immaterial being to act at all? And when it acts, what leads it to choose particular actions? Why one action instead of another?Entropymancer said:Now I'm not sure I'm following you. Consider a magical nonmaterial being which is capable of reasoning and acting without the constraints of a physical mind. It can perceive stimuli, but its reaction to them is not bound by any of the cognitive circuitry which limits our own stimulus response. And it is able to act on the material world without being physically acted on in return. This is all pretty standard fare for non-materialist worldviews, and is in fact pretty similar to the construct that many non-materialists regard as the "immortal soul".
In what way would this magical non-material being not have free will? It actions are neither predetermined nor determined randomly; they are determined only by its own volition. It is itself the cause of all its decisions and actions.
Yet, it is likely to be limited by the shape of it's own nature.Entropymancer said:In what way would this magical non-material being not have free will? It actions are neither predetermined nor determined randomly; they are determined only by its own volition. It is itself the cause of all its decisions and actions.
I don’t quite follow this clock analogy, but I think of a clock as a very deterministic system. I would say a clock has no free will. The time it shows is strictly determined by the interaction of the gears and springs and pulleys that make up the clock.polytrip said:Gibran2, what you are saying about free will is a bit like saying that a clock doesn't realy show what time it is because there are all kinds of components inside of it, we don't see, that cause the hands to move like they do.
I think some people would define free will as exactly that: indeterminism.gibran2 said:Quite correct. There is no evidence that the universe is deterministic. To the contrary, there is ample evidence that the universe is not deterministic.benzyme said:as do I. there's absolutely no evidence to support that theory.Global said:I don't think it's as polarizing as we have free will or we don't have free will. I think we have a degree of free will which can and is often affected by outside forces, but it's not like every single action in history was predetermined. I think that's nonsense.
Determinism implies absence of free will, but indeterminism does not imply presence of free will.
gibran2 said:The problem is when you say its actions “are determined only by its own volition”. What does that mean? What leads the immaterial being to act at all? And when it acts, what leads it to choose particular actions? Why one action instead of another?Entropymancer said:Now I'm not sure I'm following you. Consider a magical nonmaterial being which is capable of reasoning and acting without the constraints of a physical mind. It can perceive stimuli, but its reaction to them is not bound by any of the cognitive circuitry which limits our own stimulus response. And it is able to act on the material world without being physically acted on in return. This is all pretty standard fare for non-materialist worldviews, and is in fact pretty similar to the construct that many non-materialists regard as the "immortal soul".
In what way would this magical non-material being not have free will? It actions are neither predetermined nor determined randomly; they are determined only by its own volition. It is itself the cause of all its decisions and actions.
Dark Matter said:Of course in the "now" you are free of external influences. If you can truly be entirely in the now, that is...but that would mean separating oneself from all external stimuli and being unnable to act. As Gibran said, I doubt there is any will in that state. As soon as you would accept outside interference again you would be back to a state where memory, physical needs and other stimuli are causes of actions.
Are you telling me that you can have control over your physical body entirely?
Don't you see that our experiential NEEDS are part of that process of causes and effects?
I will agree with you that you can create new versions of yourself anytime you choose, but I would say that you would choose in a way that depends on some pre-determined factors and previous events.
Saidin said:Yes, our behavior would be different without free will, we would be even more easily controlled by outside forces than we currently are. We become totally reactionary, pre-programmed robots ulitmately with no choice as to how we live our lives. Our "buttons" could be pushed in any number of ways and we would be forced to react as others dictate because we would have no will of our own.
I never said that only humans have free will, I said that consciousness has free will. Therefore if you believe in the primacy of consciousness, then a flower also has free will, a cloud, an atom, everything...the flower doesn't open to the sun because it has to, but because it wants to experience the warmth and growth is provides. Consciousness is fractal as is everything else in existence, infinite spirals up and down from our current perspective.
I disagree that free will stands in oppostion to this unfolding, but rather is the first law of creation, that consciousness is free to express itself in whatever manner it chooses in order to BE the growth and unfolding of existence. It is this choice, this freedom to experience and grow that expands the universe. Of course you can CHOOSE to resist the eternal unfolding, which can manifest as Dis-ease in your physical form, or you can go with the flow. Your choice.
I agree with you that the universe does not need free will, and there may even be parts of it where there isn't, or other entire universes where it is not operational. But we live in a free will portion of this universe, and you are free to resist its ever unfolding expansion, or rather choose to go with the flow.
Yet, the outcome of those mechanisms is what we call 'showing the time'.gibran2 said:I don’t quite follow this clock analogy, but I think of a clock as a very deterministic system. I would say a clock has no free will. The time it shows is strictly determined by the interaction of the gears and springs and pulleys that make up the clock.polytrip said:Gibran2, what you are saying about free will is a bit like saying that a clock doesn't realy show what time it is because there are all kinds of components inside of it, we don't see, that cause the hands to move like they do.
In this case, the constraints are not external, but rather internal: Where do the reasons come from? And if the immaterial being can only act according to its own reasons, how is that free? Isn’t it then bound to act the way it does?Entropymancer said:It chooses particular courses of action for its own reason, whether out of whim, curiosity, or for its own amusement. In an immaterial realm, why should there be any constraint that its actions arise from external causes?
Yes, it's a gradual phenomenon.endlessness said:If there is no free will, is there some kind of intermediate will then? Are there different degrees of freedom in choices? Do they vary even within one person? Is this related with consciousness, and if so, how?
I dont believe in this abstract free will, but subjectively I feel like the more I work on myself, and try to become aware of how different stimulus affects me, how the past affects me, how I react, etc, the more I feel like I can make some better/more aware/more real kind of choice inside my limited degree of freedom (which usually would mean choices that lead to more of that inner growth). I know I still am influenced by things I dont know, in the very least my unconscious psychological mechanisms, and I also dont think its a linear growth, it feels more like spirals, forwards and backwards but slowly up. I compare to myself in the past and I feel that in general now I am much less of a victim and more of a (limited) active co-creator of my life
So what do you guys think? Is it all an illusion and all the degrees of choice freedom are just the same, or are there some sort of levels inside of it? Is there some validity or benefit to using a model of different levels of choice/will?