Jarhyn
Wizard
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2010
- Messages
- 15,597
- Gender
- Androgyne; they/them
- Basic Beliefs
- Natural Philosophy, Game Theoretic Ethicist
Maybe.I'm afraid I have to agree with DBT on this one. If we ask someone "Why did you chose A instead of B?", they will happily list the reasons why A was the better choice. If we follow up with "So, those reasons caused you to choose A?", they will say "Yes, that's right". So, the choice was indeed reliably caused, and reliably caused by the chooser.
Thing is, you can hypnotize someone and suggest to them that every time they hear a bell they shout "Excelsior!" Then ring a bell. They will shout "Excelsior!"
You ask them why they shouted that.
THE ACTUAL REASON is because they were programmed to do this at a deep level of their subconscious. But they will happily explain, inventing a logic chain going from bell to yell, happily satisfied that it was a choice they made and decided to do. To the subject, there's no difference between the choice to shout or the choice to go see a hypnotist tonight.
This suggests that maybe our process of 'deciding' something is not real, it happens after the fact. The decision is already made (by us? FOR us? No way of knowing.) and our consciousness exerts itself only to rationalize the decision we are merely a vector for, helpless to alter.
It's what Michael Gazzaniga calls the "interpreter", and if it doesn't know the real reason, yet feels it must have one, then it confabulates. But there's no reason to assume that the description is inaccurate under normal conditions.
Hypnosis would be an "undue influence", preventing the person from deciding for themselves what they will do. So, the behavior would not be freely chosen by the subject (a freely chosen "I will", or simply "free will"), but instead the behavior is chosen by the hypnotist.
Some insignificant behaviors, like those in the Libet experiments, can apparently be decided unconsciously and then presented to conscious awareness. But most significant decisions are going to involve a longer interplay between conscious and unconscious brain activity. But, if we asked the subject whether he participated in the experiment of his own free will, everyone would know what we were talking about.
If our unconscious brains decided to rob a bank, and left consciousness unaware, then the we would end up in jail without knowing how we got there. It would be like sleep walking. And that would be very rare if ever.
Well, one thing that helps agents such as ourselves remain stable through time is the perception that the agent has executive power.
Agents which lack executive control, almost universally, self-modify to the point of complete subordination of agency and even the reduction of abstraction: they "lay down and die".
This means that it is beneficial to the agent to create the perception of increased agency when subconscious process needs to take the wheel.
One of my most disconcerting and traumatic experiences as of late was a situation wherein the subconscious process that hijacks agency did so openly, in a situation where it was undeniable that the agent that is "me" was not driving the flesh of "the arm that I normally have control over".
It strikes me as likely that to avoid such things as the traumatic realization and knowledge (which now enables me to fight against and recognize perhaps when I am being subverted by my subconscious), that such hijacks generally be obfuscated.
This hypnosis discussion discusses a hijack which is of the form the subconscious generally obfuscates successfully.
Interestingly, I think this goes to what I'm saying about the instance of executive actions within the context of an event. If we were all aware of how little executive influence we actually have, how rate "riding the light" really is, we might all just give up on influencing anything. And that just wouldn't do.