Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
Oh, we're active participants alright, and we do indeed have self determination; however, other than within an "I did it, not you" framework there is no sense in which one is responsible for what they do---one to which blame or praise can be ascribed. No more so than one can blame a rock for where it sits. We do what we do because we cannot do otherwise.Gotta give me some points for trying. I’m not writing a thesis for graduate school here. I’m just having a conversation with other people seeking their own self-determination.
This internal self-organization isn’t at the ‘mercy’ of determinism. It’s a product of it. I agree that ultimate reason rests within the endless chain of causality, but that doesn’t erase the context of independent action. There’s a nuance in awareness happening here, such that the concept of responsibility still makes sense within the context of determinism.
Are we just passive observers?
Or are we active participants?
I think the confusion in this conversation occurs along the line of identification.
Oh, we're active participants alright, and we do indeed have self determination; however, other than within an "I did it, not you" framework there is no sense in which one is responsible for what they do---one to which blame or praise can be ascribed. No more so than one can blame a rock for where it sits. We do what we do because we cannot do otherwise.
.
But this is demonstrably not the case, at least not as stated, or at least it is not sensical or coherent enough to be meaningfully true. If there were a single kind of determinism, then its opposite could be non-determinism/indeterminism of various kinds or indeterminacy. Randomness, however, is either rather easy to define even in a rigorous fashion, but then is neither without a slew of philosophical problems when it comes to the interpretation of probabilities nor is it somehow the opposite of determinism. Nor is it the case that one can somehow say that even “pure” randomness (whatever that is) can somehow preclude either determinism or free will in the sense that seems to be asserted in the thread. After all, macroscopic determinism both from the perspective of quantum mechanics and statistical mechanics by the manner in which macroscopic aggregates of systems governed by similar probability distributions will behave on average (so, for that matter, is the so-called “arrow of time”, both entropy and thermodynamics more generally). Constraints on random fluctuations, whether in oscillating chemical reactions or in neural substrates, enable self-organization and higher-level causal structures to function due at least in part to the manner in which they “order” random perturbations.It never ceases to amaze me how much BS is written about this by seemingly intelligent and thoughtful individuals. Whether the universe is strictly a deterministic system or not is an open question but the stark fact remains that if it isn't, then the only other possible ingredient is randomness.
Randomness cannot make anything more "free". In order for "free will" to mean anything, there must be some choice-making system that is free to do as it wishes and its wishes must be determined by who it is and it must be who it is because of reasons: nature, nurture and experience.
Anything else leads to an infinite regress
That's not what Primas asserted. His point (and mine, and others, increasingly so in recent years due in particular to closing loopholes in the various proofs of Bell's theorem) is that it is a basic principle of scientific experimentation that one can...well.. actually do experiments in the manner we do. When we design an experiment or even decide to treat some observation of some system like the orbits of planets as we do, we necessarily make claims about our freedom of actions and choices. That's how, for example, random sampling works:This simply doesn't follow. There is nothing at all about scientific experimentation, that transfers information from one part of the universe (the experiment) to another (the mind of the experimenter) through a process of interaction, that requires an intervention that is outside of physics.
This is nothing like science. We call it trial and error, and to equate this with actual trials is a gross misconception of the type one finds too often in popular literature or general discussions on evolutionary theory. It endows natural processes with a kind of intent or volition or "desire" that are supposed to be useful analogies or metaphors, not mistaken for scientific inquiry by Nature.In fact, evolution by natural selection does something similar in transferring information from the environment into the genome by "trial and error" over generations
Sure. For random processes that don't result in any discoveries and for bad descriptions of these we don't need any freedom of choice, just misconceptions.and no nonsensical notion of "free will" outside of physics, not even a mind, is required. All that is needed is a process of investigation that is effectively (for all practical purposes) independent of the specific experiment.
Primas is not a philospher but a theoretical chemist whose primary work was in the development of algebraic quantum theory, primarily in W* algebras and other work in operator theory. He worked mainly in foundation physics and quantum chemistry, and is no more a philospher than quantum physicist Bernard d'Espagnat. Yet nothing precludes physicists from contributing to philosophy, as d'Espagnat did in Physics and Philosophy, noting on the freedom of choice assumption (see above for details) "the choice of the experiments is taken to be a free one means that the experimentalist must be thought to be able to choose them at will...This condition has an important role in the proof of the theorem [Bell's theorem]. It is often left implicit because of its apparent obviousness...But let it be observed that, when all is said and done, it appears as constituting the very condition of the possiblity of any empirical science" (emphasis added; p. 64).This is just an example from a lot of philosophical waffle
If you are to base your understanding of the nature of causality and determinism on more than idle metaphysical speculation of the kind that e.g., requires a Creator to avoid the infinite regress underlying "there must be a cause for everything" or similar claims that belong more to antiquity and antiquated philosophy than anything that can be said to be in line with our knowledge of the physical universe, then it is absolutely relevant. Even if you wish to remain in realm of pre-scientific reasoning with Aquinas, you must still then deal with the fact that your evidence on the nature of determinism and causality comes from your experience (including experience learning from what others have done) and this experience presumably includes that one having made choices which differ from the actions of a mindless automaton in that some at least were experienced as if you determined the results. Scientific inquiry rests on the metaphysical assumption that this is possible for everyone and that it is possible to infer from certain sets of freely made choices in experimental settings or observations, but I have outlined this part elsewhere. What is important here is that the relevance rests on the extent one wishes to engage at all with any kind of physics or science whatsoever. Then one has assumed that experimental choices were just those: free choices within the kinds of limits Primas discusses in the portion of my previous post you quoted. Elsewise, you are free to decide your own experience learning about the nature of reality precludes yours ability to do anything at all that wasn't predetermined and that you cannot have any ability to exert free choice or possess any kind of free will.All of which have little or no relevance to the point.
This is not only not "clear", it isn't even true.The exact nature of time doesn't matter because the universe is clearly "lawful", in that it is possible to examine one point in time and make deductions about the future (or the past) from that - either fully deterministically or involving some uncertainty or randomness.
This doesn't give us a causal structure as Gödel showed in his proofs of CTCs. Special relativity provides us with causal structures because affine spaces still are fixed. The nonlinearities of GR have been known for ~50 years allow for trajectories violating causal structures. The "block universe" is basically graphed on to GR from the spacetime manifold of the special theory as a possible manner in which to understand relativistic cosmology. It is not a logical consequence. Nor does GR fix any spacetime structure at all, as indeed a fundamental component of the theory is the dynamical interaction of spacetime with other physical systems (namely, those of matter/energy).The best understanding we have of time comes from general relativity and that gives us a causal structure within an atemporal "block universe" or space-time manifold
Why?All of this is utterly irrelevant however, because the very existence of thinking minds that can understand the universe and make choices requires directional time and a causal structure.
I think "we make choices" is enough for me. Granting that doesn't preclude the impossibility of making sense out of future and past in a purely objective way or of a percieved arrow of time, but I regard the capacity to make choices as fundamental not only for physics or my own work but for the sciences in general. It is the logical basis for inference and a metaphysical prerequisite. It is also neither random nor something that is deterministic.We make choices based on information gathered from the past and our understanding of the possible consequences in the future - otherwise they would be purposeless and meaningless.
That's because I don't accept pre-scientific claims about causation of the type I typically find in proofs for God. If your conception of causality requires such a form of reasoning (or one in which the necessary truth value of a proposition concerning a future sea battle to be predetermined) to be coherent, so be it. Then you have no other choice. Personally, I like to do my research without making the assumption that all of it as well as all of it that any colleagues ever have or ever will be capable of rests on a fundamental assumption that is necessarily wrong because of some simplistic claims about the nature of causality or propositional logic or suchlike.The idea of free will (compatibilism aside) is simply incoherent - and nothing in your protracted post seems to come close to addressing the basic contradiction it represents.
Don't know what you're referring to by "also," but I don't reject the concept of consciousness.Do you also reject the concept of consciousness?
The term free will or free choice is composed of two words, with the first word being "free". Free refers to something without cost and without profit. If I give you a book for free there no exchange of money. Free choice is a choice that does not have any emotional, instinctive or psychological cost or profit, since it is a free choice. Once we add cost or profit it becomes deterministic.
Determinism is implicit of a type of choice that has a cost or profit. If I place an apple and orange on the table, some people will prefer apples over the orange and will choose that. This is predetermined, since the apple will turn a profit in terms of their preferred tastes, while the alternative will have some form of emotional, instinctive or psychological cost. This may feel like they lost out on something.
Might want to reconsider these statements because they're certainly not in accord with contemporary philosophical thinking.Free will is not something that is all or not. Rather it takes work to develop. In the apple and orange example, I could train myself to eat the fruit, that I like less, until I develop a liking for it. When the apple-orange choice is once again made available, the cost or profit will start to approach zero. Now I have a free choice.
Actually it isn't. Simply look it up.
This is nothing like science. We call it trial and error, and to equate this with actual trials is a gross misconception of the type one finds too often in popular literature or general discussions on evolutionary theory. It endows natural processes with a kind of intent or volition or "desire" that are supposed to be useful analogies or metaphors, not mistaken for scientific inquiry by Nature.
More generally, when on makes a choice in empirical sciences to determine that a particular system is representative of the phenomenon or phenomena under investigation and that such-and-such a set-up that will e.g., be encoded as the initial conditions for some equations of state or in the difference or differential equations of a model or what have you, it is tacitly understood that said choices were not predetermined by anything or it would invalidate the whole procedure. One can naively think of this in terms of the attempts by good scientists to remove or account for possible biases. What allows us to say that under circumstances other than the ones that we conducted some experiment in allow us to infer that our results would hold? The fact that we chose to conduct the experiment in such a way in such a place at such a time so that none of these would effect the results. Likewise, representative samples are chosen "at random" in such a way as to allow for the claim that they are indeed samples. That's how we get around Heraclitus' claim about our inability to even step in the same river twice, let alone say something is true of e.g., electrons that we will never interact with or the vast majority of populations never tested given what we found in what we call representative of electrons or some population.
Now some compatibilists may resort to redefining "freewill" in order to to make it work within a deterministic world, but this is not only philosophically dishonest, but almost laughable.
And following right on the heels of that statement is:I've done more than look it up and you seem to be just assuming that the word "free will" in your quotes refers to the logically impossible kind.
From the wiki article:
Compatibilists often define an instance of "free will" as one in which the agent had freedom to act according to their own motivation. That is, the agent was not coerced or restrained. Arthur Schopenhauer famously said, "Man can do what he wills but he cannot will what he wills."
Then how should it be understood?This compatibilist free will should not be understood as some kind of ability to have actually chosen differently in an identical situation.
Could it be because it's germane to the compatabilist assertion? I would say, very likely.Critics of compatibilism often focus on the definition(s) of free will...
I don't know of any "correct philosophical definition," but at the most basic level I think it means the ability to have done differently. Why? because it's the definition most frequently brought into play in philosophical discussions of free will, and is one I've found to be most fitting when pitted against the notion of determinism. People who contend that determinism is false typically take the position that "I could have done differently."And what, pray, do you regard as the correct philosophical definition, and why?
I don't know of any "correct philosophical definition," but at the most basic level I think it means the ability to have done differently.
No it isn't randomness because the act is determined. And I'm sorry, but it's thee prevailing concept of free will. From the Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyBut that is exactly the absurdity that compatibilists are pointing out. If you could have done differently in exactly the same circumstances, that isn't freedom, it's randomness, because there couldn't possibly be any reason for the difference.
It is referred to as freedom, it's just that those who champion free will don't understand its implications. Unfortunately, those of us who understand those implications can't help it if free willers haven't thought it through. And even sadder yet are those who feel their compatibilism saves their lack of understanding.I really don't understand why people think the ability to do as you want should not be referred to as freedom, especially when the alternative on offer doesn't even make coherent sense.
No it isn't randomness because the act is determined. And I'm sorry, but it's thee prevailing concept of free will. From the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
But go ahead and define free will however you like. Just make sure it does its job of successfully countering determinism, because that's what the issue is all about: Determinism says there are no exceptions to its doctrine, whereas compatibilism says there are.
I really don't care what the Stanford Encyclopedia says
Of course not. Why bother with an accepted definition when you can resolve the conundrum by simply redefining free will however you like.
Don't know what you're referring to by "also," but I don't reject the concept of consciousness.
.