Marvin Edwards
Veteran Member
Free will is when our choosing is free of coercion and other forms of undue influence. Nothing more. Nothing less.
Causal necessitation is not being ignored. Reliable cause and effect is always presumed to be the case by everyone. One need not constantly re-assert what everyone takes for granted.
It will either be the case that it was causally necessary that you would make the choice yourself, for your own reasons and interests, or it will be the case that it was causally necessary that you would be coerced or unduly influenced, such that you were not free to make the choice for yourself.
Causal necessity is equally present in both cases, which is why it is never necessary to bring it up! Reliable cause and effect is universally presumed to be the case, always. It is perhaps the most trivial fact in the whole universe.
Again, definitions are not created to prove things. Definitions are meant to help people understand what most people mean when they use a given word or phrase.
I've used three dictionaries to demonstrate that "free will" has two distinct meanings. One meaning is simply a choice we make for ourselves while free of coercion and undue influence. The other meaning is a choice we make while free of causal necessity or fate.
I am using the first meaning. You are using the second. It should help the discussion to understand which "free will" we are talking about.
Neither of us believes that "freedom from causal necessity" is possible. So, the only reason for anyone to use that definition would be to make free will appear to be impossible.
There is no mention of God in either definition of free will. Oh, except in your definition, where "divine predestination" is included with causal necessity and fate.
But there is no such nonsense in the first definition.
And Cherry Picking would equally apply to "The issue of free will is related to the role of will, how the brain works and how decisions and actions are made based on science and evidence". You are picking the vocabulary of the discussion. Sorry, but that must be negotiated.
The first definition of free will does not require freedom from "how the brain works" or "how decisions and actions are made based on science and evidence". But perhaps your definition requires such a freedom. If so, then that would be another reason to drop your definition.
Free will requires only freedom from coercion and undue influence. Nothing more. Nothing less. We fully expect the decision making to be performed by our physical brains through the rational mechanisms it provides. There is no conflict between the common understanding of free will and neuroscientific evidence.
Nobody expects neuroscience to find any magic or anything supernatural going on inside the brain. We all expect neuroscience to clarify the means and mechanisms by which a brain goes about choosing from the restaurant menu what we will have for dinner.
Reductionist analysis explains how things work, but it does not 'explain things away'. Choosing what we will do, while free of coercion and undue influence, actually happens in the real world. Neuroscience seeks to explain how the brain accomplishes this function. Neuroscience cannot assert that the event is not happening.
You keep leaving out the fact that the non-chosen state of the system also chooses where the person will go and what they will do and what they will think. All of these choices by the 'non-chosen' state alter the state of the system. So, you end up with the system being in a state which is at least partly caused by its own choices. At some point we can no longer assert that the state of the system is entirely 'non-chosen'.
In the case of the criminally insane, the person is subjected to therapy whether they want it or not. But most people choose for themselves to seek therapy, of their own free will, when they feel they are are unable to help themselves.
The causal mechanism of free will is straightforward:
1. The brain encounters a problem that requires it to make a decision, such as the need to choose from the restaurant menu what we will order for dinner.
2. The brain decides, for various reasons, that we will order the Chef Salad.
3. The brain's chosen will, to order the Chef Salad, causes it to trigger the appropriate motor functions to speak to the waiter, "I will have the Chef Salad, please".
Remember that the narrator function only has access to the thoughts and feelings that reached conscious awareness. So, the only way it could answer the question, "Why did you choose the salad instead of the juicy steak?" was by having conscious awareness of the thoughts that appeared during my decision making. I recalled having bacon and eggs for breakfast. I recalled having a double cheeseburger for lunch. Therefore I felt it was best to order the salad rather than the steak.
Recognizing a problem, deciding what to do, and acting upon that deliberate intent are all part of the brain's causal agency.
It is both information processing and free will. Information processing is how choosing to order the salad works! And, if I am free to make this choice for myself, then it is a choice of my own free will.
Free will makes the practical distinction between a decision I make for myself versus a decision forced upon me by someone or something else. That is why it is a key fact the narrative. If I make the choice of my own free will, the waiter will bring me the bill. If someone forces me to order the steak against my will, then I should not be billed for the steak.
It's really as simple as that.
Determinism allows everything that actually happens. It cannot disallow selected events without ceasing to be determinism.
Again, necessitation does not exclude freedom from coercion and undue influence. Nor does it exclude coercion. Nor does it exclude undue influence. Causal necessity never excludes anything. It cannot exclude events without ceasing to be causal necessity.
The possibility to have done otherwise is as universal as causal necessity. In fact, whenever you see two possible options, it was causally necessary that you would.
It doesn't matter. In fact, it was causally necessary that I would choose to eat the apple at that precise time and place. And, it was causally necessary that it would be I, and no other object in the entire physical universe, that would make that choice for myself, free of coercion and undue influence. Thus, it was always inevitable that I would make that choice of my own free will.
Exactly!
There is no "both ways", there is only one reality. Events simply progress deterministically. Even the possibilities and alternatives that come to mind are deterministic events with reliable prior causes. For example, had we not chosen to have dinner at the restaurant before going home, we would not be at the restaurant. But it was inevitable that we would decide for ourselves to go to the restaurant, of our own free will (free of coercion and undue influence). And it was inevitable that each of us would decide for ourselves what we would order for dinner, each according to their own goals and their own reasons. Again, choices made by us and for us, while free of any coercion or undue influence. Thus, it was deterministically inevitable that we would make both decisions of our own free will.
It's really very simple when you think it through.
Necessitation is being ignored.
Causal necessitation is not being ignored. Reliable cause and effect is always presumed to be the case by everyone. One need not constantly re-assert what everyone takes for granted.
Necessitated actions are not freely willed actions.
It will either be the case that it was causally necessary that you would make the choice yourself, for your own reasons and interests, or it will be the case that it was causally necessary that you would be coerced or unduly influenced, such that you were not free to make the choice for yourself.
Causal necessity is equally present in both cases, which is why it is never necessary to bring it up! Reliable cause and effect is universally presumed to be the case, always. It is perhaps the most trivial fact in the whole universe.
Definitions alone prove nothing.
Again, definitions are not created to prove things. Definitions are meant to help people understand what most people mean when they use a given word or phrase.
I've used three dictionaries to demonstrate that "free will" has two distinct meanings. One meaning is simply a choice we make for ourselves while free of coercion and undue influence. The other meaning is a choice we make while free of causal necessity or fate.
I am using the first meaning. You are using the second. It should help the discussion to understand which "free will" we are talking about.
Neither of us believes that "freedom from causal necessity" is possible. So, the only reason for anyone to use that definition would be to make free will appear to be impossible.
People refer to these things every day, ''thank God that our Janet did well at school,'' ''Let us pray to the Lord....''
There is no mention of God in either definition of free will. Oh, except in your definition, where "divine predestination" is included with causal necessity and fate.
But there is no such nonsense in the first definition.
The issue of free will is related to the role of will, how the brain works and how decisions and actions are made based on science and evidence, not slapping labels onto carefully selected conditions...which is Cherry Picking.
And Cherry Picking would equally apply to "The issue of free will is related to the role of will, how the brain works and how decisions and actions are made based on science and evidence". You are picking the vocabulary of the discussion. Sorry, but that must be negotiated.
The first definition of free will does not require freedom from "how the brain works" or "how decisions and actions are made based on science and evidence". But perhaps your definition requires such a freedom. If so, then that would be another reason to drop your definition.
Free will requires only freedom from coercion and undue influence. Nothing more. Nothing less. We fully expect the decision making to be performed by our physical brains through the rational mechanisms it provides. There is no conflict between the common understanding of free will and neuroscientific evidence.
That doesn't explain the means and mechanisms. It doesn't happen through magic.
Nobody expects neuroscience to find any magic or anything supernatural going on inside the brain. We all expect neuroscience to clarify the means and mechanisms by which a brain goes about choosing from the restaurant menu what we will have for dinner.
Reductionist analysis explains how things work, but it does not 'explain things away'. Choosing what we will do, while free of coercion and undue influence, actually happens in the real world. Neuroscience seeks to explain how the brain accomplishes this function. Neuroscience cannot assert that the event is not happening.
The non-chosen state of the system determines how you think and respond.
You keep leaving out the fact that the non-chosen state of the system also chooses where the person will go and what they will do and what they will think. All of these choices by the 'non-chosen' state alter the state of the system. So, you end up with the system being in a state which is at least partly caused by its own choices. At some point we can no longer assert that the state of the system is entirely 'non-chosen'.
External input alters the brain. Therapy, not free will, alters brain function. The patient seeks help because they are unable to help themselves.
In the case of the criminally insane, the person is subjected to therapy whether they want it or not. But most people choose for themselves to seek therapy, of their own free will, when they feel they are are unable to help themselves.
The causal mechanism of free will is straightforward:
1. The brain encounters a problem that requires it to make a decision, such as the need to choose from the restaurant menu what we will order for dinner.
2. The brain decides, for various reasons, that we will order the Chef Salad.
3. The brain's chosen will, to order the Chef Salad, causes it to trigger the appropriate motor functions to speak to the waiter, "I will have the Chef Salad, please".
Yes, all the work of acquiring and processing information is done unconsciously, the result presented in conscious form.
Remember that the narrator function only has access to the thoughts and feelings that reached conscious awareness. So, the only way it could answer the question, "Why did you choose the salad instead of the juicy steak?" was by having conscious awareness of the thoughts that appeared during my decision making. I recalled having bacon and eggs for breakfast. I recalled having a double cheeseburger for lunch. Therefore I felt it was best to order the salad rather than the steak.
Recognizing a problem, deciding what to do, and acting upon that deliberate intent are all part of the brain's causal agency.
It is both information processing and free will. Information processing is how choosing to order the salad works! And, if I am free to make this choice for myself, then it is a choice of my own free will.
Free will is being inserted into the narrative. ...
Free will makes the practical distinction between a decision I make for myself versus a decision forced upon me by someone or something else. That is why it is a key fact the narrative. If I make the choice of my own free will, the waiter will bring me the bill. If someone forces me to order the steak against my will, then I should not be billed for the steak.
It's really as simple as that.
Determinism doesn't allow alternative.
Determinism allows everything that actually happens. It cannot disallow selected events without ceasing to be determinism.
The intention to eat the apple is necessitated, not freely chosen.
Again, necessitation does not exclude freedom from coercion and undue influence. Nor does it exclude coercion. Nor does it exclude undue influence. Causal necessity never excludes anything. It cannot exclude events without ceasing to be causal necessity.
Chosen implies the possibility to have done otherwise ...
The possibility to have done otherwise is as universal as causal necessity. In fact, whenever you see two possible options, it was causally necessary that you would.
Brain activity only takes milliseconds, but as a deterministic system, the world began its inexorable progression of events long before it came to you selecting an apple, with no possible alternate action.
It doesn't matter. In fact, it was causally necessary that I would choose to eat the apple at that precise time and place. And, it was causally necessary that it would be I, and no other object in the entire physical universe, that would make that choice for myself, free of coercion and undue influence. Thus, it was always inevitable that I would make that choice of my own free will.
Considering what ''could have been done otherwise'' is a part of the learning process. It's an exercise in imagination which provides a different outcome in the future.
Exactly!
You can't have it both ways, if the events progress deterministically, there is no possible deviation or alternate action.
There is no "both ways", there is only one reality. Events simply progress deterministically. Even the possibilities and alternatives that come to mind are deterministic events with reliable prior causes. For example, had we not chosen to have dinner at the restaurant before going home, we would not be at the restaurant. But it was inevitable that we would decide for ourselves to go to the restaurant, of our own free will (free of coercion and undue influence). And it was inevitable that each of us would decide for ourselves what we would order for dinner, each according to their own goals and their own reasons. Again, choices made by us and for us, while free of any coercion or undue influence. Thus, it was deterministically inevitable that we would make both decisions of our own free will.
It's really very simple when you think it through.