zippy2006
Dragonsworn
- Nov 9, 2013
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- 3,846
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Oh dear, I can't help myself.
Besides, it's always fun to cherry-pick posts that weren't addressed to you. 
Good to know.
I tend to think that free-will is the ground of merit rather than something meritorious in itself, but I do think it is good and not a malfunction. I grant that it is hard to describe what exactly free-will is, but it is some sort of potential for self-creation and, in the sphere of the external world, creatio ex materia. For a variety of reasons I think atheists more successfully critique the coherence of free-will than believers, in part because they do not believe in a free God.
Apparently you think that if the "malfunction" of free will were removed we would simply be blessed, living in a kind of paradise. I tend to think that we would either be automata or else constant riders on a rollercoaster constructed entirely by someone else.
Further, the theological difficulty of the "malfunction" claim is the idea that God created something with a malfunction, be it Adam, Satan, or whomever.
I certainly hope you're not surprised by this fact!
Of course the claim that we could have done something different than we did is not an empirical claim or even a logically provable claim. It is more of an intuition and axiom of practical life.
I think the starting point for this has to be the commonsensical intuition that if someone was responsible for their act then they must have been capable of not-doing it. That's why we punish humans but not computers. Secondly, the key distinction is apparently whether it was in our power to change any event that occurred in the entire chain of events. So if you believe that "we are able to change our perception of the good," even by a millionth of a percentage point, then we are capable of changing some causal factor. As you rightly point out, this would contradict determinism. If that perceptual change can be counted as a decision, then so be it. If that perceptual change must only be counted as a causal condition that eventually leads up to a decision, so be it. Either way determinism is out.

Where I disagree with the determinist is that we cannot change our perception of the good. I think we can, but it is often more of process that just deciding to do differently. What has to change is my perception (both cognitive and affective) of what is good.
Good to know.
I don't see free-will, as we often talk about it, as some great boon. It is a malfunction of a creature that was created to be reasonable and free; instead we are foolish and bound.
I tend to think that free-will is the ground of merit rather than something meritorious in itself, but I do think it is good and not a malfunction. I grant that it is hard to describe what exactly free-will is, but it is some sort of potential for self-creation and, in the sphere of the external world, creatio ex materia. For a variety of reasons I think atheists more successfully critique the coherence of free-will than believers, in part because they do not believe in a free God.
Apparently you think that if the "malfunction" of free will were removed we would simply be blessed, living in a kind of paradise. I tend to think that we would either be automata or else constant riders on a rollercoaster constructed entirely by someone else.
Further, the theological difficulty of the "malfunction" claim is the idea that God created something with a malfunction, be it Adam, Satan, or whomever.
I have no experience of having ever done otherwise.
I certainly hope you're not surprised by this fact!
Of course the claim that we could have done something different than we did is not an empirical claim or even a logically provable claim. It is more of an intuition and axiom of practical life.
Maybe I should come out and say, I reject the notion that free will obtains, if and only if, I could have done otherwise. I have no experience of having ever done otherwise. I have only done what I have done. And, for the most part, I have done what I wanted. That is the experience of freedom with which I am familiar.
What does it mean to say that I could have done otherwise? It means that given the exact same set of circumstances, I could have made a different decision. The determinist will include one's thoughts and inclinations in that "same set of circumstances." The indeterminist will not, and say those set of circumstances do not include thoughts and inclinations. Honestly, I find the whole premise uninteresting.
I will say, like the determinist, in conisdering such a scenario of doing otherwise, I include one's thoughts and inclinations in that "same set of circumstances." I include them because they are integral, causal factors in the process that terminates in moral acts. And, once we include them, then I have no idea why I would choose otherwise. I must have some reason for choosing otherwise, but once we start adding changes, changes that will affect the process, then we no longer have the same set of circumstances. Even so, I find that particular approach to free will uninteresting, because even if I could have done otherwise, it doesn't mean I did what was good.
I think the starting point for this has to be the commonsensical intuition that if someone was responsible for their act then they must have been capable of not-doing it. That's why we punish humans but not computers. Secondly, the key distinction is apparently whether it was in our power to change any event that occurred in the entire chain of events. So if you believe that "we are able to change our perception of the good," even by a millionth of a percentage point, then we are capable of changing some causal factor. As you rightly point out, this would contradict determinism. If that perceptual change can be counted as a decision, then so be it. If that perceptual change must only be counted as a causal condition that eventually leads up to a decision, so be it. Either way determinism is out.
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