I was talking about free will.
And I have no idea what free will2 is and what free will1 is.
EB
Okay, let me try it a different way.
The problem in need of philosophical scrutiny is the issue that came up shortly after determinism was first originally posited. The issue in question form is thus, "Is determinism or is determinism not compatible with something?" The term used for that something was "free will." Can there be free will in a world where determinism is true? Assuming determinism, is there room for free will? There were those that felt "if determinism is true, then there's no place for that something." We won't concern ourselves with the camp that denies determinism, for the issue requires the assumption. So, the reality of determinism remains steadfast in the equation. With determinism embedded as stationary and unremoved, can this something they call free will coexist in reality as we know it (that again, assumes determinism)?
In our endeavors to answer the question, we also sought to hone in on just what free will is. We cannot, well, ought not or should not redefine the problem away. Yes, with our sense of free will so well articulated, they are most certainly compatible, but the problem hasn't vanquished.
Free will is not an illusion. Tack that on the wall and cement it in to our terminology. Yes, when we make choices in absence of compulsion, they are choices of our own free will, and since it is no illusion, what then to make of the real problem? If by forces of nature within a fully deterministic universe that any event that occurs was set in stone, then every event that does occur must occur. How dark and hopeless! We can still hold people responsible for their actions made of their own free will since actions are among choices logically available to us, but if they are not in fact physically possible pursuant to the laws of nature, then Houston, we have a problem.
Imagine writing a computer script where options and choices are made. The players cannot tell that the options chosen were fated. There's no evidence! So, yes, the best answer is by far the answer given by the soft determinist, but it still sidesteps the underlying grip that keeps the issue alive.
The problem hasn't vanquished?
Uh, no, the problem hasn't vanished, that's true. The problem hasn't vanished for some. For me, there's no problem left.
I think you should very much like what I will now say: There are two apparently irreducible perspectives on the real world. One is the ontological perspective. The other is the epistemological perspective.
According to determinism, for a given situation, there's only one outcome. This is the ontological perspective.
I would agree that this perspective seems to be in conflict with our idea that we have free will. But no, it isn't. The ontological perspective is essentially a metaphysical view. That is, we don't know, and probably couldn't know, if it's true. We can believe it's true but we cannot prove absolutely that it's true. All we have is our epistemological perspective on the world, which we believe is based
entirely on our perceptions. Even our ontological perspective is grounded on our epistemological perspective, which is why we can only believe rather than know it's true, and therefore why it is a metaphysical view.
The problem with our ontological perspective is that whenever we have to act, ontology is useless. Whenever we have to act, we go through our epistemological perspective. That's what we do. You do it. I do it. We all do it. Even our ontological perspective says we have to do that. This is because this perspective sees the flow of events as causally related, i.e. the present determines the future because the future is seen as the causal outcome of the present situation. We don't know whether that's true. We just usually accept it. We usually believe it's true. And we believe it's true because the idea of causality is really an extension of our sense of free will. Our everyday experience tells us that what we choose to do determines what happens. It seems to me that having that experience as a human being just cannot not lead us, everyone of us, to extrapolate this experience to the idea of causality being the operational force driving the flow of events in the natural world. Eventually, we all get there.
Yet, this remains a metaphysical view. Whatever we do, we still have to go through our epistemological view to act. That's probably just a consequence of what sort of beings we are. We don't know the world. We don't have any knowledge of the world. All we have is what we are. So we have various perception organs, our eyes, our ears etc. We have a memory. We have a mind. We have effector organs, our hands, our mouths, our sexual organs, etc. Whenever we act in the world, we go through a complex process whereby our brain produces actualised representations of our environment, of our body, and our mind selects and controls the main parameters of our action.
Sure, our ontological perspective says it's really our brain that does it, and most of us believe this is true. But the things we really know are those we experience through our epistemological perspective. It's rather telling that even when we use computers, we can only replicate this organisation. Our ontological perspective says we have computers, fundamentally deterministic computers. To use those computers, however, we have to go through the epistemological perspective. We write software programmes, programmes which contain
explicit choice instructions: IF x = 2 THEN lightB2 = 16. This is straightforwardly mimicking what the human mind does. We think we know (we believe) it's really the computer, the hardware, that does everything. Even the software we think is really just an aspect of the hardware. Yet, we don't know how to use a computer if not through the epistemological perspective. So, we write programmes that contain IF-THEN instructions, which are absolutely essential to any programme, and work in effect much like the kind of mental choices we use for our every action in our everyday life.
If ever someone comes up with a way to stop using the epistemological perspective, to only go through the ontological perspective, then the notion of free will will disappear for this person. For now, the only person in this case I can think of would be God Himself he is does exist. Not us, because of what we are, or seem to be.
So, one way to see this, is to say that our ordinary notion of free will is an operational notion. We don't know how to not use it to make sense of our everyday experience of the world. The only free will which is really contradictory with our idea of a deterministic world is the metaphysical concept of free will, which is something different from our epistemological notion of free will, which is itself based on our
sense of free will.
So, do you like that?

EB