''Human behavior is affected both by genetic inheritance and by experience. The ways in which people develop are shaped by social experience and circumstances within the context of their inherited genetic potential. The scientific question is just how experience and hereditary potential interact in producing human behavior.
Ignoring for a moment the repetition of a variety of mistakes you make, this is incorrect.
The mistakes are yours. Your mistakes stem from your unwillingness or inability to understand the implications of determinism in relation to how the brain works, processes information and generates thoughts and actions.....and that is not through the agency of free will.
Human behavior is shaped by genetic inheritance, yes, and by external experience yes, but also by experience of the behavior of the human themselves.
For heavens sake, the ''experience of past behaviour' is determined by the past events and the ability of the brain to retain and use that information, enabling recognition and an understanding of our environment.
That is not free will. If determinism is true, that mental process proceeds as determined, not freely willed.
You are acting and pretending as if humans cannot modify their own "future behavior", the internal mechanisms which determine how they will act according to various inputs, despite the fact we can just reconnect our experience to our imaginations rather than external reality and test them.
You fail to grasp that nobody is saying that humans can't learn and adapt. Any animal with a sufficiently developed brain can do that.
A functional brain, not free will, is what enables pattern recognition and adaption.
And it is, as pointed out numerous times, it is the non-chosen condition of a brain in the instance of decision making that determines the decision that is made in that instance.
Brain condition is not a matter of free will.
We have gone many pages of you bloviating about what you think humans can't do and why and ignoring all the actual counter-examples to those claims which indicate there is something severely wrong with your analysis.
Well, there are too many pages of pointing out the basics of determinism and its implications for thought and the decision making, and you have yet to grasp how it works according to how you define determinism.
I can only conclude that your attachment to the idea of free will is too strong for you to even consider questioning your own assumptions.
All you need to be disproven is ONE counter example.
I have presented you with boxes that manipulate their own states and humans that manipulate the script of "what will I do in the future" based on the present state.
If you didn't understand, these are concrete disproofs of your claim of a lack of regulatory control.
You have presented nothing more than unwillingness to consider how determinism is defined in relation to how compatibilists define free will.
Never mind that you keep invoking elements of Libertarian free will, which is not compatible with determinism.
It's a mess.
If the mechanisms of control, the prefrontal cortex is damaged or underdeveloped, there is little or no self control.
So I find this part interesting in that it directly accepts, fully and tacitly, that there IS self control happening when that prefrontal cortex is functional.
When I talk about "self control" though, I usually add this caveat: it is hard and takes work.
The fact that some people have a harder time of it, or need to reconstruct the machine, or need to ask someone else to do some abstract stuff to augment the will of the person with the desire to impart self control does not wave away the self control as an available and attainable mechanism "across" reality. It only means it happens to be absent or lacking in that ONE place for that ONE reason.
It is a "momentary" rather than "utter" lack of self control within the context of physics as happens in our observable reality.
The self control necessary for responsibility is right there.
That self control is hard and needs work has nothing to do with free will.
As the brain is modular, there are numerous different inputs into behaviour, habits or addictions, needs, wants, fears, etc, each competing for attention....one desire or need in conflict with another. At times the addiction may takes control, other times the desire to change may be powerful enough (training, therapy, adaptive neural architecture) to overcome undesirable behaviour.
Some people are good with 'self control' while others struggle. One has no more free will than the other, simple a matter of how their brain is wired and life experiences, training, help received, etc...
Consider the irrelevancy of the notion of free will, for
instance;
''We ought to think about decision making in terms of neurological control, not because this is some sort of eternal absolute truth, but because among the options on the table currently, it shows the most promise of coherently unifying the scientific, ethical, judicial, and personal realms of our experience, and because it has the best chance of improving our understanding of ourselves and one another. Research in neuroscience is already well underway, and we can manipulate control across species using conditioning, drugs, and lesions. 4
Just as we have learned to consider our decisions as “free choices,” we can shift our introspection toward our varying levels of control. A man forced to choose between a hamburger and heroin might be acutely aware that his control is being compromised by an addiction. Insisting that he has (or lacks) free will ads nothing to our understanding of his behavior. Nor does it provide any useful suggestions of what we as a society ought do with him legally. An understanding of the problems that opiate addiction creates for one's self-control and how best to treat these difficulties, along with a knowledge of the user's history, would help a judge or jury make informed decisions based on the likely outcomes of various incarceration and rehabilitation programs.''