@Terxpahseyton
What is the problem with attaching an ideal to a reality? The whole concept of government is an ideal that humans came up with to keep the reality of chaos at bay.
[...]
Faith and trust are flimsy concepts, but they do serve a purpose.
The problem depends on what you want so say. I do not want to deny the concept of free will its
use. I think for the individual as well society this concept is a useful, yes necessary concept to embrace, to some extend.
However, what would be harmful is to embrace it as an immediate reality. Because that would mean the decision to live in a world of fantasy, and hence to to cast aside realities for nothing but their inconvenience.
To illustrate: One the one hand - it is necessary to demand people to take responsibility for their actions. Not because such responsibility actually, fully, truly, exists. But because doing so, because the mere assumption of it gives beneficial incentives, beneficial to overall everyone.
But - if we want to do justice to us and our fellow beings - that is not the whole truth. So if we care about justice, realizing this is essential. So that, for instance, we don't just shrug off biographical failures as individual failures, but also consider exterior factors which benefited such failures.
That is a balancing act, and one lacking a clear guideline. There is always to danger o encourage people to act wrong or to look over their natural disadvantages. It comes down to balancing very different and even opposite dimensions. One founded on educating or disciplining us. Another on understanding and compassion.
Both is needed. And so is their understanding for their justification.
The current physical condition demands that if every one did what they wanted to do, there would be chaos and not order. Order can only result in the control of free will. Order is not the product of free will. The whole point with free will is that we can change the outcome without some external force. We can choose to live in peace, but the choice is to give up control over others, even if they cannot control themselves. Faith and trust are flimsy concepts, but they do serve a purpose.
Hah, this sounds very similar to a piece on the freedom of will by Karl Popper I have read.
But as Popper, I think you are dead wrong in your assumption that freedom of will was a prerequisite for order. Rather, in my opinion, the prudent assumption is that our constraints of will are the source of order. For the reason that this is the way more simple and less presumptuous explanation, while being just as good. Saying - our brain is wired to serve order. Because order means survival. While chaos means unpredictable risks.