Sunday, August 16, 2015

Free will

Well, these are old thoughts – I wrote this out at length on 6/22/13 – but I keep coming back to them. Some people say we lack free will, because everything we do is a determinate function of who we are and the circumstances we find ourselves in, and, further, who we are is a function of  our history, including the chance formulation of our genetic makeup.

First, I question the word “determinate”.  At the very least, I challenge the speaker to show me how to make the term operational. (Cf. Laplace’s demon 11/22/09)

But even granting, for argument, that our choices are determined, in some sense, by these things, all you are really saying is that I have a mechanism by which I make choices, and I will make the choice that the mechanism produces.  How could it be otherwise?  What would it mean to make a choice other than by some mechanism?  Some physical/chemical apparatus, presumably, but even if I believed in a divine spark, doesn’t the spark have some sort of nature?  Some process? 

If choosing, based on the dictates of my own nature, how best to respond to the circumstances I find myself in is being “unfree”, exactly who or what is it that is not free?  Am I seeking the freedom to choose something other than I want to choose?  Well, I could – if I wanted to.  (Oops…)

I  conclude that the choices are accepting what we have as free will, or accepting that the question of free will is an undefinable pseudo-question.  But this is a matter of semantics, not metaphysics.  The conclusion “we lack free will” is not one of the alternatives.

3 comments:

  1. Good stuff. I'm also irritated by the brain science folks who want to argue that the choosing self is an illusion because you can set up a test where you make some physical sign of having made a decision before becoming consciously aware of having made it. But a multipart self (a decider, a perceiver, an archivist, etc.) is not a lack of a self...

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  2. Good stuff. I'm also irritated by the brain science folks who want to argue that the choosing self is an illusion because you can set up a test where you make some physical sign of having made a decision before becoming consciously aware of having made it. But a multipart self (a decider, a perceiver, an archivist, etc.) is not a lack of a self...

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  3. Agree, Daniel, except I think the multi-part self is more tentative, and less neatly categorical than that; e.g., there are multiple "deciders", often working at cross purposes.

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