Marvin Edwards
Veteran Member
The process doesn't begin with 'what we choose.'
A deliberate act begins with us choosing what we will do, and ends with us acting upon that choice.
What we think and 'choose' is determined by antecedents, which in turn determines what happens next and so on.
Of course. All events are reliably caused by prior events, stretching back in time as far as we can imagine. But the farther back we go, the less meaningful and relevant, and the more incidental, each prior cause becomes.
The most meaningful and relevant prior cause of a deliberate act is usually the act of deliberation that precedes it.
No deviation. No alternatives.
Yet you keep trying to deviate the chain of causation around us, as if we weren't even here.
And you ignore the fact that we have no alternative but to consider multiple alternatives every time we must choose. Instead you pretend that choosing isn't happening when clearly it is.
All actions are fixed by the deterministic interaction of the systems constituent parts...
And some of these parts are intelligent living organisms that execute control of events by deliberately choosing what they will cause to happen and what they will not cause to happen.
Nobody is suggesting that the universe has the capacity to think.....yet there are constituent parts of the universe. lifeforms, that have evolved to think, feel and act.
Intelligent lifeforms have evolved to think, feel, and choose for themselves what they will do. Don't forget the choosing. They also can perform addition and subtraction. Choosing is another logical function that is performed by the human brain. Neuroscience refers to "decision-making".
The physical universe is composed of information, chemistry, physics, relativity, quantum, etc...where, at least on one planet there has evolved an information processor capable of acquiring and processing information, representing it in conscious form and responding rationally in order to benefit the survival of the organism, the brain.
A bit of an "Idealistic" turn there. Technically speaking, the physical universe is not actually composed of information, but it does contain brains. It is not composed of chemistry, but it does contain chemicals. It is not composed of physics, but it does contain physical objects (quarks, atoms, ... people, ... planets, stars, etc.). Information, chemistry, physics, etc. are all products of the brain's understanding of these physical things.
Someone once said that "information is useful knowledge". It is data in a form that is usable for some purpose.
Which has nothing to do with free will.
Well, let's see. We know that we actually exist as physical objects in the universe. And we know that our brains actually make decisions. And we know that these decision can causally determine our actions. And we know that our actions will causally determine subsequent events.
So, where is free will? Free will is when our choosing is free of coercion and undue influence. And that is the case most of the time. However, sometimes someone else's choices are imposed upon us against our will, such as by a guy with a gun telling us to hand over our money or be shot dead, in which case our will is not free, but is subjugated to his will.
There are a number of other cases where the choice is not under our control. For example, a significant mental illness, or someone having authority over us (parent/child, doctor/patient, commander/soldier, etc.), or manipulation by deception or hypnosis, and similar influences that can effectively remove our control of our choices.
Nothing was freely willed.
That's just silly. All kinds of actions are freely chosen by us every day. Just look around and watch people deciding what they will wear to work, or what they will fix for lunch, or what college to attend, or which car to buy, etc. etc. etc.
Not evolution. Not brain capacity and ability. Not neural architecture, not how we perceive the world, not how we think or act.
The list of things we did not choose, like how we got here by evolution, or like how our brains work, or other such prior causes, does not in any way reduce the millions of things that we actually do choose. And our choices routinely control what we will be thinking about and what we will actually be doing.
Choosing for ourselves what we will do is something that our brains have evolved over thousands of year to routinely do for us. It was never necessary for us to choose what evolution would do in order to choose what we will have for dinner.