Compatibilism is the argument that free will is compatible with determinism as Compatibilists define it to be . If the world is not deterministic, Compatibilism has no bearing on how the world works, which makes it practically irrelevant. The question then becomes, what is the nature of free will in relation to a non deterministic world, and how does this definition of free will relate to the workings of a non deterministic world with its random and/or probabilistic events.
This assumes that programmed responses are:Accepting the paradigm of Determinism as true (which is may well not be), Free Will would be impossible, because the pre-determined act of seeming to choose between illusory alternatives is not an exercise of will. It is simply a programmed response.
I don't agree. Condition (a) is certainly present for most human decisions, as I think you'll agree, and so is of little import; But condition (b) seems unweildy and arbitrary.Stated differently, the existence of Free Will in its pure form depends upon (a) the existence of true “options” or “alternatives,” and (b) humans being capable of thinking (and acting) in a manner that is not 100% caused by prior activity that is outside their control.
I am not seeing how indeterminism has any bearing at all on free will, though.If the world were not deterministic, then compatibilism would be irrelevant by definition. There is a sense in which we do live in a nondeterministic world--quantum indeterminism.
Compatibilism is the argument that free will is compatible with determinism as Compatibilists define it to be . If the world is not deterministic, Compatibilism has no bearing on how the world works, which makes it practically irrelevant. The question then becomes, what is the nature of free will in relation to a non deterministic world, and how does this definition of free will relate to the workings of a non deterministic world with its random and/or probabilistic events.
If the world were not deterministic, then compatibilism would be irrelevant by definition. There is a sense in which we do live in a nondeterministic world--quantum indeterminism. However, we interact with reality at a level of events in which experience tells us that causality works and we live in a deterministic world. Moreover, there are ways of interpreting quantum mechanics such that determinism makes sense (e.g. Everett's Many Worlds Interpretation).
Yeah, if hard determinism is true I had no choice to write what I wrote, and you had no choice to write what you wrote.
So?
Of course it is not true, so there is that.
Rather than focus your responses on insulting the poster, it would be more productive if you would address the substance of the posts.
Again, you may have no choice but to write the way you do. If you do have such a choice, however, then your choices leaving something to be desired.
The key word is interpretation.In an interview published at https://www.scientificamerican.com/...d-t-hooft-says-quantum-mechanics-is-nonsense/, Nobel Prize-winning physicist Gerard 't Hooft offers a compelling critique of the conventional interpretation of quantum mechanics.The universe at bottom is quantum indeterministic, so there is that.
't Hooft argues that accepting the theory as inherently probabilistic and ultimately mysterious is a limiting mindset. According to 't Hooft, the belief that quantum mechanics can never provide more than statistical answers has led science down a narrow path.
Instead, 't Hooft urges researchers to take a philosophical and intellectual step back—to question the assumptions underlying modern physics and imagine what the fundamental laws of nature might look like without starting from quantum mechanics. "We will understand," he insists, rejecting the idea that the quantum world is forever beyond our full comprehension. In that regard, 't Hooft calls for a deeper reexamination of what quantum mechanics actually is, rather than treating it as an unshakable foundation.
This is consistent with the fact that Quantum Theory, like every other attempt to explain the working if the universe is a metaphysical paradigm -- a modern version of Greek and Roman mythology, which similarly were believed to reflect a grand and true understanding of the universe until they were no longer viewed that way.