Free will:
1. free and independent choice; voluntary decision:
the definition of free will
I find this still incredibly vague, but I do like the phrase "independent choice." Humans do not make independent choices. Every choice is dependent on an overwhelming number of factors; for starters, a brain.
Again, free will is one of the most important aspects of consciousness
Disagreed. Just cause you say something is an important aspect doesn't make it so.
therefore it unequivocally pertains to the questions of the OP.
I'd agree with your conclusion here if it wasn't built off a premise of a personal value judgment.
If you can't argue that free will is a product of something happening in brains, then you can't provide the first argument the OP asks for.
It's true. I cannot argue that things I don't believe exists are tied to anything that I believe does exist. I can make the argument that the rest of the functions of consciousness as you've described them are.
Free will is only one of the many phenomena that constitute consciousness that you need to argue are products of something happening in brains.
It's not even a phenomena that exists outside a narrative people tell to themselves, let alone do I need to argue it's a product of anything.
Okay, so elaborate...
You said
"(If consciousness were not causally efficacious, then it couldn't have been selected for in the organism generation after generation.)"
Alright, if consciousness isn't casually efficacious, which you are suggest it is, then it couldn't been selected for in the organism generation after generation, which you suggesting it was.
Okay, if consciousness has been selected for in the organism generation after generation, by what mechanism is "consciousness" being selected for? Genetic, correct? So in order for "consciousness" to be selected in a generation, the information coded in the DNA, which specifically does nothing but give instructions for creating proteins that can be read by enzymes and transmitted to RNA, where RNA is read by enzymes to make amino acids... etc. Okay, so in this process... "how does consciousness" arrive from the parents?
Is the DNA conscious?
Is the fertilized egg immediately conscious?
Is the zygote?
Is the fetus?
Is the baby at birth immediately conscious?
If not, when does it become conscious?
Where does this conscious arrive from? We know it travels through the genetic information in DNA, as this is the only way a favorable trait can possibly be selected for, and DNA is just used to make amino acids, which are used to make proteins, which are used to make up everything in the human body, including the brain and the nervous system coincidentally. At what point does the consciousness come into play here?
Thanks for elaborating on this specific issue, btw, because it's the most germane to the original argument I made regarding the OP.
What conclusion are you referring to?
Well, I shouldn't call them conclusions, because you didn't arrive at them. You state plenty of things as if I should take it for granted that the reasoning for accepting a fact as true has already been established when it hasn't... EXP:
"It's the willful acts that are unaccounted for by any known mechanics."
This was stated as a fact despite it was never deduced from premises.
Another:
"There are 2 possible ways to account for these acts that people promise to perform far into the future and then fulfill: Those are either willful acts or they are involuntary bodily movements."
Was a premise for your first argument, which I stated was based on assumption that only said 2 possible ways exist...
For the sake of moving past the small things though, I'm willing on move on from it, since you did give one below.
It apparently takes you a while to catch on, as I already explained once that such commonplace activities as people entering into contracts, such as a mortgage, and fulfilling their agreements (to write a check for a particular amount by a particular day of each month for the next 30 years) are only accounted for as willful acts, since people cannot predict involuntary body acts 30 years in advance.
Alright since we are on free will anyways, I'm fine with talking about it more in depth, but I still think it's really a necessary condition to prove free will to have the discussion the
I can give it another shot.
". . . agreeing to perform a particular act or set of acts--such as paying a mortgage company a certain amount of money by a certain date each month--is quite common. People can and do say that they will perform such a series of acts for 30 years, and 30 years later have done exactly what they said they would do.
There are 2 possible ways to account for these acts that people promise to perform far into the future and then fulfill: Those are either willful acts or they are involuntary bodily movements..."
Ignoring the fact that just saying there 2 possible ways to do something doesn't make it so, I'm just nothing that what you are saying here is one can make a plan to write a check to pay their mortgage on a specific day 30 years in the future.
Great, so far. Then you state:
"But people can't correctly predict their involuntary bodily movements 30 years into the future. People can't predict such involuntary bodily movements even hours into the future. People can't accurately predict the day or hour they are going to have a heart attack or stroke. People can't accurately predict the day or hour they are going to have their next headache or hiccup."
Alright, so you are arguing here, that because one can predict what they say are going to do in the future, and they cannot predict what are involuntary bodily acts in the future, that there is a difference between these two humanly actions, and the former can only be accounted for by "free will" (just as a note, I like "independent" better than "voluntary"...).
Originally I had noted: "Also, I can correctly predict my involuntary bodily movements 30 years into the future. Assuming I have not died by then, I will take at least 100 breathes, January 7th, 2053."
So when you say:
"People can't predict such involuntary bodily movements even hours into the future."
I claim I can... I just did.
You tried to address the predicting of involuntary bodily movements:
"People can't accurately predict the day or hour they are going to have their next headache or hiccup."
So now there is a new caveat. Now only does on have to predict the involuntary bodily movement, but it most also be arbitrarily accurate...
So let's take this back to your mortgage example... You can claim 30 years from now on a single day, you will pay your mortgage payment. I can claim 30 years from now on a single day, I will take at least 100 breathes. I can't claim the specific seconds each of those breathes begin (though I bet I could get pretty damn accurate... within a minute)... but also you can't claim that you will pay your mortgage payment on an exact second. Or if you can second, can't do microsecond...
So I'm saying the argument is fallacious because you arbitrarily set a standard for accuracy for involuntary movements that do you do not maintain for supposedly non-involuntary movements. A hiccup you claim is involuntary because I can't predict the exact moment I'll have a hiccup 30 years in advance. But the fact that one can't make a mortgage payment with that degree of accuracy either seems to suggest to me that this would also qualify it as an involuntary movement.
(Like I said, I'd prefer independent/dependent movements over voluntary/involuntary movements, as I don't see voluntary movements as an indication of independent movements.
This argument is also faulty because it is just assuming that the ability to predict one's own actions makes it have free will. When I stated that a computer could predict it's own actions 30 years in the future with far more accuracy than any being writing a check to a mortgage company can, you didn't respond to this objection.
P1: All my finger movements that are predictable by me are voluntary (willful) acts.
P2: Typing “Yoko Ono” in purple font in my next post on this thread is a finger movement that is predictable by me.
C: Therefore, typing “Yoko Ono” in purple font in my next post on this thread is a voluntary (willful) act.
The argument is nicer... however, because it's sort centered around the notion of "voluntary (willful)" act, instead of independent act, it's just not showing me some sort of a free will, but on a person acting on a will, a will that is dependent...
But it also makes this weird assumption that any action I take in the future that I can predict automatically makes it a voluntary action... I will show this isn't the case: Hence:
P1: Starting in the next second, and ending at midnight tonight, I will day at least 100 predictable breathes by me, involuntarily.
P2: Me taking 100 breathes from the next second to midnight is a bodily action that is predictable by me.
C1: Therefore, breathing 100 times between the next second and midnight is a predictable yet involuntary action.
C2: Someone predicting their own action in the future, does not actually make it voluntary by virtue of being predicted.
According to your claims of lacking the ability to choose, for instance, between stating a true proposition rather than a false one, it is your posts that are nothing more than the answers the Eight Ball gives.
Just to clarify here, when you ask:
"Do you or do you not believe that you have the ability to choose to assert a true proposition rather than a false one?"
And I say:
"..I don't have the ability to choose to assert a true proposition rather than a false one.."
I'm only using "I" here because you asked about me specifically. What I really mean is that you and I are both incapable to knowingly asserting true or false claims about the state of existence with more epistemological certainty than an 8-ball. I'm not just applying it to myself here. So my claim isn't so much "that I lack the ability to choose," but rather "we both do and so does everyone else."
As soon as you gave a definition for fundamental, I immediately figured out what you were talking about in regards to energy, so I'm glad at least got past that part. Yeah, in that case energy is a fundamental energy. Consciousnesses, not so much.
3. being an original or primary source:
a fundamental idea.
You mean all three at the same time?
the definition of fundamental[/QUOTE]
I'm assuming you mean No. 3, and thanks, finally. Now that I actually have the definition I asked for, I can remove the word "dualism" from my original argument, and represent now... which I will do in time. I can specifically address how consciousness isn't a "fundamental property."
We disagree plenty, or at least it appeared to be the case, so thanks for you willingness to engage in discussion despite the fact isn't wasn't smooth all the way through.