If prior states of the system entail current and future states of the system, choosing doesn't come into it.
States of the System:
1. We're hungry, and we've just sat down at a table in the restaurant.
2. We've picked up the menu (in order to satisfy our hunger, we must choose something from the menu).
3. We are considering that juicy Steak.
4. But then we recall that we had bacon and eggs for breakfast and a double cheeseburger for lunch.
5. We go back to the menu to look for some vegetables.
6. We find several salads, and the Chef Salad looks good.
7. We have decided to order the Chef Salad.
8. We tell the waiter, "I will have the Chef Salad, please".
All of this is entailed by the state of the system as it evolves from prior state to current and future state, each state entailing the next.
What you do, you must necessarily do. No alternatives, no multiple or alternate possibilities, everything proceeds as determined, not chosen.
A choice implies the possibility of doing something different.
Determinism - by definition - does not permit deviation, consequently, there is no choice.
As you can see, (a) each state of the system entails the next state of the system and (b) choosing was right there in the middle of it.
What is entailed by the system is not a matter of choosing. Actions unfold as they must.
Once again, the claim that "if prior states of the system entail current and future states of the system, choosing doesn't come into it", is simply and very obviously false.
Not at all. Choosing is defined by the possibility of doing something else, which is something that cannot happen when it comes to determinism.
Choosing not only happens, but it necessarily happens. It was causally necessary/inevitable, from any prior point in eternity, that choosing would happen right then and right there in the restaurant.
There is no alternative. A river doesn't choose its course. The moon doesn't choose its orbit, the brain doesn't choose its own makeup or response.
And it's not just us, but everybody in the restaurant, obviously choosing what they will have for dinner.
No alternatives; 'All of these events, including my choices, were causally necessary from any prior point in time. And they all proceeded without deviation from the Big Bang to this moment.'' - Marvin Edwards.
Entailment doesn't involve choice.
Apparently it does. In fact, entailment involves every single event prior to that choice, the events within that choosing, and all events following that choice.
Nothing is chosen, the system evolves without deviation, fixed from condition at time t and how events unfold ever after.
How is it choosing when you order steak at 8:35pm on Saturday night, as determined, if is just as inevitable as raindrops falling from the sky?
It simply is what it is. Choosing is inevitable. Raining is inevitable. We cannot claim that raining is not happening due to inevitability. We cannot claim that choosing is not happening due to inevitability. Both claims are equally false.
Rain doesn't choose to fall. The earth doesn't choose to orbit the sun...
Complexity doesn't transform inevitability into freedom.
There is no such thing as "freedom from causal necessity/inevitability".
That's the point of incompatibilism, and the reason for the failure of compatibilism.
Every freedom that we have, to do anything at all, is inevitably us, inevitably deciding for ourselves, according to our own inevitable goals and our own inevitable reasons, what we will inevitably do. Got that?
Sure, that being the reason why freedom of will is incompatible with determinism.
1)If all future events are perfectly knowable, they are determined events, a fixed future.
2)The future being fixed, there is no possibility of an alternative action.
3)There being no possibility of an alternative action, a person literally cannot choose to do anything other than what has been determined to happen.
4)With no realizable alternative possibility, no decision or action is truly chosen or freely willed.
There is no need to be free from causal inevitability in order to be free to do what we want.
If the action is determined, we must necessarily do what we want.
''Wanting to do X is fully determined by these prior causes. Now that the desire to do X is being felt, there are no other constraints that keep the person from doing what he wants, namely X.'' - ''Cold comfort in compatibilism' article.
Like Robert Kane said, “It might be true that you would have done otherwise if you had wanted, though it is determined that you did not, in fact, want otherwise.”
If my wants are inevitable, and my choosing from these wants what I will do is also inevitable, then causal inevitability is neither a meaningful nor a relevant constraint upon my doing what I want.
Being inevitable, we don't choose, we think as determined and we act.
But a guy with a gun, telling me to do what HE wants me to do, rather than what I want, is a meaningful and relevant constraint upon my freedom to do what I want.
It is a meaningful distinction, but still doesn't involve free will on the part of any of the participants of the event.
We are talking about determinism, not freedom to do other than what is entailed to happen in that instance in time and place.
We've gone over what is entailed to happen in the restaurant above, and have done so repeatedly in our prior comments. And we find that choosing is entailed. And that it was also entailed that we would not be subject to coercion or undue influence, therefore it was our own decision, our own freely chosen "I will" ("I will have the Chef Salad, please").
Again, 'choosing' implies the idea regulation and the ability to have taken a different option. No such thing can happen within a deterministic system.
You keep insisting that we use "freedom from causal necessity/inevitability" as the definition of free will. But there simply is no such thing. It is a bit of silly nonsense. There is no freedom at all without reliable cause and effect.
I am arguing that free will is incompatible with determinism for all the reasons outlined above.
And what we will inevitably do, due to causal necessity, is exactly identical to us just being us,
Not enough. Everything that exists is the same boat.
choosing to do what we choose to do. This is neither a meaningful nor a relevant constraint upon our freedom.
We cannot 'choose what we choose to do.' The system evolves, and events proceed as they must.