... Neuroscience provides the evidence that we as conscious entities do not control brain functionality, that on the contrary, it is brain functionality that shapes and forms our conscious experience, thoughts and actions.
That's okay. As long as it is our own "brain functionality" that is actually making the decision then that logically implies that "we" are making the decision. The alternative is dualism, separating "us" from "our brain". Neuroscience does not support the notion of a separate soul being controlled by the brain.
That the state of the brain equals the state of us, how we think, what we think and what we do.
Exactly.
That is adaptive intelligence, but not free will.
Free will is when a person decides for themselves what they will do, while free of coercion and undue influence.
Note that free will does
not claim to be free from
our brain.
Nor does it claim to be free from
causation.
It only claims to be free from coercion and other forms of undue influence. Our own brain cannot coerce us, because it is us. And there's certainly nothing undue about having a brain (nearly all of us have one). So, it's a very ordinary influence. The only exception are cases where the brain is damaged in some way, by injury or illness. Such damage can be an extraordinary influence upon our ability to decide for ourselves what we will do.
So, the definition of free will, as a choice we made while "free of our brain", is just as silly as trying to define free will as a choice "free of causation".
To avoid these absurdities, we must use the operational definition of free will, a choice "free of coercion and undue influence".
The compatibilist relies on mislabeling and misdirection in an attempt to establish what is not there.
The incompatibilist relies on mislabeling and misdirection in an attempt to establish what is not there. They use absurd definitions of free will. They characterize causal necessity and determinism as having the power of causal agents, able to control us against our will, to make our decisions for us, to plan what we will do even before we are born.
What do we have? Information processing is present with intelligence as a feature of processing power, response is thus enabled - not by 'free will' - but action enabled by intelligent information processing.
Intelligent information processing includes choosing what we will do. Choosing for ourselves what we will do, while free of coercion and undue influence, is the operational definition of free will.
So, free will is what is going on within intelligent information processing. You cannot make the specific operation go away by pretending it is not part of the more general notion of intelligent information processing.
The Student Room said:
''The
liberty of spontaneity, a key idea in the soft determinist line of argument, can be criticized because it is arguably not enough to make us morally responsible.
This is shown here: if the absence of constraints is all that is needed for us to make free choices then surely this should apply to inanimate objects such as rocks, boulders or clouds. If there was a rock fall which killed a person camping underneath, it seems ridiculous to attribute blame to those rocks. In addition, if acting voluntarily is to be considered central to the theory then animals could be seen to be morally responsible. Either way it can be argued that the theory rests on a flawed principle; thus undermining the whole compatibilist theory."
I hope you are not waiting for me to explain why rocks do not have free will, while all intelligent species do. Please do not waste your time and mind with such silly nonsense.
The Student Room said:
"Soft determinism is, in the words of William James, a ‘quagmire of evasion’. James claims that there is a fundamental contradiction in claiming that we are morally free and responsible and also claiming that it is ultimately our nature that will define our morality. Sure then, we can only be fully morally responsible if we had been the designer of our own being. As this is not the case, we are therefore not morally responsible.''
That prompted me to read William James essay, "The Dilemma of Determinism", from his book, "The Will to Believe and Other Essays". James defended the notion of "chance", his short, blunt word for "indeterminism". He argued for the moral necessity of real possibilities. Determinism left us with everything inevitable, with no distinction between good results and bad results, and with no regrets for bad actions, and no motivation to make the world a better place. He made some valid points.
"The indeterminism I defend, the free-will theory of popular sense based on the judgment of regret, represents that world as vulnerable, and liable to be injured by certain of its parts if they act wrong." (WJ)
He concludes his essay with these words:
This reality, this excitement, are what the determinisms, hard and soft alike, suppress by their denial that anything is decided here and now, and their dogma that all things were foredoomed and settled long ago. If it be so, may you and I then have been foredoomed to the error of continuing to believe in liberty.
James, William . The Collected Works of William James (8 collections of William James containing dozens of lectures all with active table of contents). . Kindle Edition.
But my approach is very different. I have no evasions and no quagmires. I incorporate the notions of possibility and alternatives into the rational causal mechanism, thus preserving both determinism and free will, without the need for any causal indeterminism.
If I had to label my own determinism it would be "perfect determinism". I presume that all events, including quantum level events, are reliably caused through perfectly reliable causation. Not "by" perfectly reliable causation, because causation itself is merely a concept. The notions of "cause" and "effect" are used to describe the natural interactions of objects and forces as they bring about events. Only actual objects and the actual forces between them can be said to cause events.
We happen to be one of those objects that go about in the world causing things to happen, and doing so for our own reasons and our own interests. The empirical event in which we decide for ourselves what we will do, while free of coercion and undue influence, is commonly referred to as "free will" (literally a freely chosen "I will").
We call it "free will" for the same reason we call a cat a "cat", to distinguish the cat from other things, like dogs. We use the label "free will" to distinguish our freely chosen will from a "coerced" will or an "insane" will or an "involuntary accident".
The fact that an event is causally necessary from any prior point in eternity only means that each event is reliably caused by prior events. For example, our birth was causally necessitated by our parents sexual intercourse. The prior cause of our birth was not causally necessitated by causal necessity, it was causally necessitated by the intercourse. There was no threesome (that would be a reification fallacy).
That essentially sums up the failure of compatibilism.
In your dreams.