DBT
Contributor
Inner necessity is not being ignored or dismissed. Our unconscious events that generate our thoughts and actions are still our own unconscious events.
Whether I ordered the salad consciously, or while sleepwalking, the waiter is still going to present me with the bill. It was my brain that decided to order the salad, and my own voice that told the waiter, "I will have the Chef Salad, please".
That it is our unconscious events does mean anything in terms of free will if the system simply produces what it must based on inputs, neural architecture and memory function.
None of which is chosen, subject to will or regulation in terms of doing something different.
Clearly, inner necessitation is contrary to the notion of free will, and this is being swept under the carpet using terms like ''our own unconscious events,'' as if that makes a difference.
Everything in the universe has 'its own' makeup and properties. ''Our own processes, therefore free will,'' doesn't work
Whether I ordered the salad consciously, or while sleepwalking, the waiter is still going to present me with the bill. It was my brain that decided to order the salad, and my own voice that told the waiter, "I will have the Chef Salad, please".
Entailed, not decided. There was never a possibility that you wouldn't order Chef Salad at the precisely determined place and time.
Which is just as problematic for the idea of free will as external force, coercion or undue influence.
Apparently not. There is a clear distinction between a choice that I am free to make for myself versus a choice forced upon me by coercion or insanity or authoritative command or hypnosis or transcranial magnetic stimulation or any other undue influence.
The distinction is not sufficient to establish free will as some sort of ability that we have. It just boils down to crafting the desired terms, a semantic construct.
A word game.
The normal brain is not an undue influence. Rather than eliminating our free will, it is the very source of our ability to decide for ourselves what we will do. Free will does not require freedom from our own brain. Nor does it require freedom from causal necessity. Free will simply requires freedom from coercion and undue influence. Nothing more. Nothing less.
Inner necessity on its own eliminates any notion of free will. The distinction between being free of external pressures and acting according to our own desires does not negate or transcend inner necessity or establish that we have freedom of will.
''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. At this point, we should ascribe free will to all animals capable of experiencing desires (e.g., to eat, sleep, or mate). Yet, we don’t; and we tend not to judge non-human animals in moral terms.'' - Cold comfort in Compatibilism.
''An action’s production by a deterministic process, even when the agent satisfies the conditions on moral responsibility specified by compatibilists, presents no less of a challenge to basic-desert responsibility than does deterministic manipulation by other agents. '
This has been thoroughly dealt with above. Determinism eliminates neither free will nor responsibility. It will inevitably be I, myself, that chooses to order the Chef Salad. It will inevitably be I, myself, to whom the waiter presents the bill. Determinism changes nothing.
It hasn't been 'dealt with.' There have been many attempts at circumventing inner necessity as a major problem for compatibilism.