I wrote out a post last night, until it was deleted. I'm glad I did, though, because (specifically with regards to WillJ) I had a new thought.
WillJ said:
I don't think you can disagree that your idea of free will is nonstandard, meaning it is
not instinctive and
not commonly held. Simply put, since you were a small child - and probably right up to this very moment - you
feel like you have the free will I'm talking about, and you act as if you do.
I have no clue why you say that. Again, "desire" doesn't mean "instinct." I probably shouldn't be using the word "desire" anyway, since it is indeed a loaded term.
But, when you follow it downwards, it does! Ultimately desires are either the result of the will, other desires, or instinct. Instinct would be the wellspring from which everything else comes.
Now I'll talk about your viewpoint. You seem to think that your actions being predictable makes you unfree. Disagreement with that is probably what's most fundamental to my viewpoint. How does predictability equate to a lack of freedom?
Let's say that I, being the genuis that I am, invent a machine that is able to predict with 100% certainty what you will do. It says that you will have a cupcake for dessert. I don't even tell you this, yet sure enough, you have a cupcake for dessert.
Regardless of what the machine predicted, YOU decided to have a cupcake. No one else did. No thing else did either. You might say, "The electrons in my brain did!" But the electrons in your brain are what make YOU. Sure, in this hypothetical situation, science has allowed us to discover and understand every square inch of you, but me understanding you doesn't make you any less YOU than you were before I understood you.
I've heard a good example that should explain: Let's say you're sitting in your room. You really like it; you're digging sitting in your room, doing whatever it is you do, and you
want to stay there very much. Unbeknownst to you, the door is locked. Are you free to leave? No! Are you acting in accordance with your desire? Of course! But are you free? No.
To be free, there
must be at least two options, both of which are viable.
You seem to desire (oops, I mean want ) to have a will that's unpredictable, yet not random. You say this makes sense in every way except "the purest statistical terms." What other (valid) terms are there?
Random, I think, can either mean unpredictable, or it can mean uncaused according to any sense or design. I understand the problems the second definition raises with regards to free will, but more on that in turn.
You want your decisions to have causes. On that we agree. The fact that my decisions are based on neural activity (and a plethora of other things) is a good thing, because those are causes. But you seem to think it's a bad thing, which makes your opinions quite inconsistent. You want your decisions to have causes, yet when we scientifically discover them, the causes are somehow bad.
Imagine your free will is some sort of mystical, almost ghost-like entity in another world, able to interact with your brain, which is in this world (I think I'll give this idea a name ... how about dualism ). I suppose this is the traditional idea, and I'll take a wild guess and say that's what you want it to be like. But, wait a minute, you say you want this mystical free will to base its decisions on causes. And if its activity is based on causes, then surely we humans (or at least an infinitely intelligent being) could discover the causes. Which is what science is all about, finding the causes of things.
Now, last night I wrote out something like this: According to your theory - just call it a soul! for simplicity's sake - you are right in that, in the end, it
does seem random. My response, however, was that this 'randomness' is tolerable, because the only cause is our own will. And, however random that will appears, it is still
our will. Which random option we choose is entirely up to us. This hardly seems like randomness at all, then - since we are in complete control of it. (So wouldn't it be predictable
to us?) Now, does this violate my second definition of randomness, meaning it is uncaused? Well, no, because we're the cause. But are our decisions random? You say they are uncaused - but they are certainly caused by ourselves. What
leads us to choose them is motivated by outside factors, but not determined without doubt - there is a little extra push from our will, in one direction or another. This appears random, but it is randomness which is controlled by a will - a very interesting kind of randomness.
What I realized afterward, however, is that this is a very old problem recast: What was the First Cause? Materialism fails to answer this question, and the free will theory answers it in a way similar to the religious supposition of God - a little disappointing, perhaps, but still
something.
Ayatollah So said:
But the "old" definition of free will which ties it to a nonphysical soul was itself a revision. It seems to have been invented sometime in the Middle Ages (but then, I'm not much of a historian). We compatibilists are trying to change it back - to purge this unnecessary and irrelevant complication. Stripped to its bare bones, free will is about the powers of intelligent minds - not about whether a physical or supernatural metaphysics underlies them.
That may well be, but the Medeival idea of free will is very, very,
very entrenched. To replace it with the new (or old) definition of free will would involve a sea change - and one, I think, that would never happen, if you want this change to be
transparent and also alter the way people think about their own free will.
You must, however, consider all the factors involved in this change. To truly beleive in this new definition would undermine - or at least severely alter/damage - ideas about guilt, democracy, crime & punishment, the very way we approach every decision of our lives...
It's not just political freedom. Consider how legal punishment uses the term "free will". And imagine that the defendant subscribes to your definition of free will. I can just imagine the conversation:
Consider how legal punishment would use
your term? Can we send anyone to jail any more? Can we continue to beleive in "evil" crimes that warrant the death penalty or life imprisonment? Why would these questions be decided democratically, anyway?