Neural network response to stimuli is the decision maker. The action being 'chosen' being an inevitable action based on the state of the system in that moment in time.
"A decision in the true sense" is "an inevitable action based on the state of the system in that moment in time".
Which is true of all things that process information, computers, brains, simple organisms, microbes, etc. No free will necessary as an explanation or tag.
Let's try to sort this out correctly so we nail it down:
1. We have
machines like thermostats, computers, and robots, that can make decisions, but which lack a will of their own. They make decisions, for us, but have no interest of their own in the outcomes.
2. We have
microbes and all other simple living organisms that have a biological "will of their own" to survive, thrive and reproduce, which can exhibit goal directed (purposeful) behavior, but which can only act upon instinct. They lack the evolved neurology required to imagine alternative actions and choose between them.
3. We have
intelligent species with a highly evolved neurology
capable of imagining
multiple possibilities, evaluating the likely outcomes of each option, and
choosing for themselves what they
will do.
When a member of an intelligent species is free to choose for themselves what they will do, it is a freely chosen will.
But when they are prevented from choosing for themselves what they will do, it is not a freely chosen will.
A freely chosen will is never free from reliable causation, but then again,
nothing ever is. So, the fact that the choice was causally necessary does not change the fact that it was
free of coercion and other undue influences.
The fact that the choice was causally necessary from any prior point in time (determinism), is an
insignificant,
meaningless, and
irrelevant fact, because it is always the case of
every event.
The fact that the choice was free from coercion and undue influence is
significant, because not all choices are free from such undue influences. It is
meaningful because it sorts out the cause of the behavior, as deliberate versus coerced versus insane, etc. And the nature of the cause determines the method of correction. It is
relevant, because in most cases we can actually do something about the cause.
However there is nothing that anyone can do about
causal necessity. It is a background constant that is always the case of all events. It makes no meaningful distinctions between any events, and there's nothing at all that can be done about it, so it is
irrelevant to any human scenario.
Determinism, being based upon the principle of causal necessity, is similarly
insignificant,
meaningless, and
irrelevant.
A determined action is not a decision.
A decision is a
determined action that "decides" something. The fact that the decision was inevitable does not change the fact that the deciding
actually happened in physical reality.
There was never the possibility to choose otherwise.
We pick up the restaurant menu and are faced with many possibilities. It is necessary for us to select one of those possibilities or we'll have no dinner. And we
will select one of those possibilities from among the many that we
can choose.
One "I
will" plus
multiple "I
can's" equals one "I
did" plus multiple "I
could have done's".
"I
could have done otherwise" is clearly true. "I
would have done otherwise" is clearly false.
A real choose entails multiple realizable options. Determinism doesn't allow multiple realizable options.
Look at the menu. Which of those items do you claim to be "unrealizable"? Although I
will choose only one, I
can choose any item that I want, and the chef will prepare it so that I can realize eating it.
It is the only action that can be taken in any moment because it is "an inevitable action based on the state of the system in that moment in time" - which is clearly what I meant.....I have said it multiple times.
But causal necessity cannot say that it is the only action that "
can" be taken in any moment. Causal necessity may only say that it is the only action that
will be taken in any moment.
Going by the standard definition of determinism, things can't be different within a determined system. Nothing can be different. You can hypothesize or lament past decisions, but they cannot have been different.
Well, things
will never be different in a deterministic system. Nothing
will be different. As to what
can or
cannot happen, causal necessity cannot say, because it has
no context of uncertainty.
Every event within a deterministic system
certainly will happen.
The very notion of a
possibility, something that
may or
may not happen, exists solely to deal with matters of
uncertainty. It is a logical token that
has no meaning in the context of certainty. The same is true for words like "can", "option", "alternative". When dealing with matters of certainty, these words have no meaning.
Whenever we use one of those words, we immediately shift the discussion back into the context of uncertainty. And for us humans, we spend a lot of our time in that context.
So, there is a logical error in the "standard definition of determinism". And that error creates cognitive dissonance when people are told that they "could not have done otherwise", because they know for a fact that they had another option, and that "I can choose that other option" was
true as they entered the choosing operation. They were uncertain what they
would do, but they were certain as to what they
could do. Oh, and of course, they were logically correct. It is the standard definition that is logically incorrect.
Outcomes are determined by how events interact and unfold.
Of course. And if things were different, then they would have interacted and unfolded differently. When anyone says "I could have done something else", it always carries the implication that (1) "I did not do something else" and that (2) "things would have had to be different in order for me to have done something else".
Things can't be different.
No. Things
won't be different, even though they
can.
We are talking about determined world, not a probabilistic world. Determined events are fixed by initial conditions and proceed as a matter of natural law.
Yes, more or less (natural law is not a causal agent, but it is the common metaphor for reliable causation).
And, yes, given matters as they are at any prior point in time, all events will proceed reliably in precisely one single way.
But
among these events (that will proceed reliably in precisely one single way) will be those events where we choose for ourselves what we certainly
will do from among the many possibilities that we certainly
will imagine.
There is no "freedom from causal necessity", but there certainly is "freedom from coercion and undue influence".
You may be thinking of Libertarian free will.
No. From what I hear, Libertarian free will views causal necessity as a threat to free will, so they reject the notion that their choices are deterministic.
The resolution to both the Hard Determinist position and the Libertarian position would be to stop viewing causal necessity as a causal agent, but rather to view it as a logical fact with no significant meaning or relevance to any human scenario. Causal necessity cannot be viewed as being responsible for any events. It is descriptive, not causative.
Intelligence is about providing our species with behavioral adaptability. Unlike species that can only act upon instincts, we get to choose what we will do. We imagine new possibilities, like flying in the sky as birds do, and we imagine creating a machine that enables flight, and we imagine different ways to do this (propeller, jet, helicopter), and we choose which possibility we will actualize, and different people choose other possibilities. And that is how the single actual future comes about, by us deciding for ourselves what we will do.
Within the domain of human influence, the single inevitable future will be chosen by us from among the many possible futures that we can imagine.
The point was that it is the neural architecture of a brain that enables information processing and its related mental functions and abilities, pattern recognition, cycles, trends, making predictions...which is not a matter of will, certainly not free will.
Yes and no. Yes, it is our brain's neural architecture that enables information processing, etc. But information processing includes making decisions as to what the person will do. When faced with a decision that it must make, like choosing from the menu what the person will have for dinner, it will normally review several items that it can choose, and from that review choose what the person will do.
And, if someone is pointing a gun at the person, and ordering them to "Have the roast beef", when they would rather have a salad, then that is not them making the decision, but rather the guy with the gun forcing a decision upon them against their will.
''How could I have a choice about anything that is an inevitable consequence of something I have no choice about? And yet ...the compatibilist must deny the No Choice Principle.” - Van Inwagen
I'm guessing that the "No Choice Principle" is the same as the "
Principle of Alternate Possibilities". My solution to the problem may appear novel: The possibilities that occur to us while making a decision are causally necessary mental events that inevitably will happen. And, if my choice is inevitable, then it is equally inevitable that it will be I, and no other object in the physical universe, that will be making the choice that causally determines what will happen next. It is inevitable that the control will rest within me.
Cool, huh?