Nope, this whole 'a choice someone makes for themselves' is bogus.
An extraordinary claim would require extraordinary evidence. One cannot disprove the fact that our carpenter decided for herself that she would build the house. She discussed her idea with others. She drew up the plans that everyone can see. She hired the subcontractors, purchased the materials, and did the carpentry work herself. No one forced her to take on such a task. She decided for herself that she would do it.
It wasn't an extraordinary claim. Given determinism, there is an interaction of environment and brain. Information from the environment acts upon the brain in deterministic ways. A truck bearing down on you causes you to leap to the side, for instance. You leapt to the side, but your action was caused by external information.
Indeed, a truck bearing down on a person will force the person to leap out of the way, or die. Our response is forced, by the threat of death, and not a matter of free will.
The conditions in the external world include the items on the menu, which prompts the proclivities housed in the brain. It is not one or the other, but a deterministic relationship between brain and environment.
With the menu, on the other hand, there is no such force, so we are free to choose for ourselves what will happen next. The menu lists the many meals that we can order, and our choosing determines what we will order. We are free to choose any item on the menu. They are all equally available to us. Every one of them is a realizable alternative. Every one of them is a real possibility.
That which will control our choice is us, our own brain, our own tastes, our own dietary goals. The menu is not controlling us. And the menu will not choose for us what we will have for dinner tonight. We have to do that for ourselves. And, whatever we choose, we will be expected to pay for, before we leave.
This has been explained and supported by experiments in neuroscience.
But are you accurately reporting what the neuroscientists are saying? Let's take the current example:
The personal narrative
''For example, in one study, researchers recorded the brain activity of participants when they raised their arm intentionally, when it was lifted by a pulley, and when it moved in response to a hypnotic suggestion that it was being lifted by a pulley.
Similar areas of the brain were active during the involuntary and the suggested “alien” movement, while brain activity for the intentional action was different. So, hypnotic suggestion can be seen as a means of communicating an idea or belief that, when accepted, has the power to alter a person’s perceptions or behaviour.''
''All this may leave one wondering where our thoughts, emotions and perceptions actually come from. We argue that the contents of consciousness are a subset of the experiences, emotions, thoughts and beliefs that are generated by non-conscious processes within our brains.''
This subset takes the form of a personal narrative, which is constantly being updated. The personal narrative exists in parallel with our personal awareness, but the latter has no influence over the former.''
This is the second time you've posted that article without including its authors' own conclusions at the end:
The personal narrative (Concluded, highlights mine)
"Our conclusions also raise questions about the notions of free will and personal responsibility. If our personal awareness does not control the contents of the personal narrative which reflects our thoughts, feelings, emotions, actions and decisions, then perhaps we should not be held responsible for them.
In response to this, we argue that
free will and
personal responsibility are notions that have been constructed by society. As such, they are built into the way we see and understand ourselves as individuals, and as a species.
Because of this, they are represented within the non-conscious processes that create our personal narratives, and in the way we communicate those narratives to others.
Just because consciousness has been placed in the passenger seat, does not mean we need to dispense with important everyday notions such as free will and personal responsibility. In fact,
they are embedded in the workings of our non-conscious brain systems. They have a powerful purpose in society and have a deep impact on the way we understand ourselves."
Please note that the authors themselves endorse the notions of free will and personal responsibility, and even suggest that "they are embedded in the workings of our non-conscious brain systems."
Actions are initiated before conscious awareness, narrator function kicks in, etc.
Again, you are going beyond the neuroscience with your own interpretation. The experiments by Benjamin Libet and others use the most elementary notions of choice, such as asking the subject to squeeze their fist randomly, whenever they feel like it, over a two minute period, and then comparing the timing of the readiness potential in relation to the subject's awareness of their conscious intent. And such experiments do show preconscious choosing followed by conscious awareness.
But that is not really what free will is about. Free will is a choice we make for ourselves while free of coercion and undue influence. For example, the person's first choice is not whether to squeeze his fist, but whether to volunteer for the experiment. If the person is forced to participate against his will, then the experiment would be unethical and invalid.
So, the unfolding of events actually begins with the subject choosing, voluntarily (of his own free will) to participate. This freely chosen intent motivates and directs his subsequent thoughts and actions. His intent (his will) causes him to pay attention to the experimenter as the apparatus, and what he is expected to do with it, is explained to him. His intent causes him to carry out those instructions when given the "go ahead" by the experimenter.
The freely chosen "I will participate in the experiment" happened long before he sat down and strapped on the apparatus, and it is the only way that he can explain to himself and others how he happens to be sitting in that chair at this moment, and doing what he was instructed to do.
That is where we find free will, not in the random squeezing of his hand, but in the causal determinants of his being there in the first place.
Identifying with neurons - I am my neurons - does nothing to establish freedom of will.
Are you claiming that free will requires that we exist separately from our central nervous system? Then you are using "freedom from our own brain" as an essential part of your definition of free will. That is certainly how some people, those who believe we are souls that operate independently of our bodies and brains, might define free will. That is the specific "free will" that neuroscience rejects.
But that is not the secular notion of free will. Free will is simply when a person chooses for themselves what they will do while free of coercion and other forms of undue influence. Nothing more, nothing less. It requires nothing supernatural. It does not require us to be free of our brains (our neurons) or free of cause and effect (determinism).
It only requires freedom from coercion and undue influence, things that we may reasonably conclude actually remove our control of our own choices.
Which is why Compatibilists must engage with sophistry.
Nope. The sophistry is coming from the incompatibilists. Compatibilists use pragmatism and empiricism to provide a realistic explanation for what is actually going on.
''Ah, but it's us doing it'' does not equate to free will.
Actually, it does. Free will is a choice we make for ourselves. If we are doing it, then we obviously are free to do it. The exceptions would be internal undue influences, such as a significant mental illness that subjects us to hallucinations and delusions, or subjects us to an irresistible impulse, or impairs our ability to reason. So, it is not enough that it is us, but also requires freedom from undue influences (e.g., significant mental illness).
Neurons are information processors, not free will generators.
When our central nervous system is deliberately choosing from the menu what we will order for dinner, and it is doing so while free of coercion and undue influence, it is not "generating" free will, it is simply
demonstrating it.
Acting in accordance with one's will is - if the action is determined - an inevitable action.
Yes. In fact, acting in accordance with one's will is usually determined by our choosing that will in the first place. The choosing itself will be caused by our encountering a problem or issue that requires us to make a decision before we can proceed, as in the case of the restaurant, where encountering the menu requires us to choose what we will order before we can proceed to eating it.
The decisions you make (inner necessity/entailed) are an expression of how you think. How you think is an expression of who you are. Who you are depends on your genetic makeup, social circumstances, family, nation, culture, life experiences.....
Of course. And, we (our genetic makeup expressed as our body and brain) were there, participating in every interaction with our family, culture, and other social influences. We do not enter the world with a blank slate (
tabula rasa) upon which the environment writes our destiny. We come into the world as a living organism with needs and interests of its own, and we negotiate with our physical (e.g. crib) and social (e.g. parents) environment for control throughout our lives.
Our carpenter chose for herself to become a carpenter despite the many options available to her. That conscious intent got her through trade school. And when she decided to build a house, that conscious intent got her from laying the foundation to applying the finishing touches to her new home.
”If the neurobiology level is causally sufficient to determine your behavior, then the fact that you had the experience of freedom at the higher level is really irrelevant.” - John Searle.
Free will is not about subjective experience. It is an empirical event in which a person chooses for themselves what they will do while free of coercion and other forms of undue influence. We can watch people doing it in the restaurant. Each diner opens a literal menu of alternative possibilities, considers these possibilities in terms of their own goals and interests, and tells the waiter what they will have for dinner. The logical operation that reduces a list of options to a single choice is called "choosing". And it actually happens in physical reality, right there in front of us.
Not only can we see it for ourselves, but each diner can see it for themselves as well. And it is the empirical evidence, that they saw with their own eyes, that convinces them that they just chose for themselves what they would order for dinner. Their conclusion is not based upon some subjective feeling, but upon the same objective observation we made as we also watched them doing it.
Also, the quote by Searle introduces the dualistic notion that a person's neurobiology is somehow controlling the person against their will, rather than the correct understanding that the person IS their neurobiology, such that what the neurobiology deliberately controls, the person also controls. When speaking of deliberate decision making, the person and the neurobiology are one, and the same thing.