I agree with all of that.
Thanks.
Of course. The reasons are what determines your choice.
In other words... I want to build muscles, and that determines I go to the gym?
Say I do not go to the gym, but I choose to jog, do squats, pushups, pull ups, etc.
I have plenty of options, don't I, and
the freedom to make one choice or other - free will.
The reason has not determined the choice I made. The reason only gave me options - choices. None of which I have to make.
However, because I want to... it is what I prefer, over the choice to not bother, because I feel lazy.
Making the choice I made allows me to reach my objective / goal.... depending, on the choice I freely make.
Do you disagree?
Sure. You might have a motive to lose weight. But you decide to have an extra helping of pizza anyway. Because it's what you prefer at that moment.
Exactly.
I have the freedom to choose to get fat, and that is not determined by my motive, or desire.
It's the result of the choice I freely made... however bad... or good.
Determinism means that every act is caused by antecedent conditions. The reasons why you make a decision are what determines that decision. Rather obviously.
I got up this morning with a plan to make fries.
I decided to open a can of tuna, and make a couple of tuna sandwiches.
What preceded, and determined my choice to make tuna sandwiches? Do you know the reason?
I had choices, and I was free to make one... which I did.
No. I wasn't coerced.
In you OP, you said.
All decisions we make are determined by existing and prior influences. There has been an effectively infinite chain of events which has resulted in me sitting here writing this sentence. They have all led to this point. From the major events - I was born at a specific time and place, to the minor ones - it's raining today, to the seemingly inconsequential - I broke a string on my guitar last night.
There is no way that existence cannot be described other than determined.
The question is then not whether we make decisions that affect the trajectory of future events - I obviously decided to do this rather than something else. But if free will is defined as the ability to make decisions that are not determined by prior events and we could rerun the last hour exactly as it happened and make a different decision, then something actually needs to be different. But rerunning it exactly as it happened means that nothing is different.
So free will cannot be compatible with determinism. And if existence is deterministic then free will is an illusion.
I don't want to make the mistake of thinking you are not consistent, and neither do I want to make the mistake of not being clear on what you are saying exactly. So, let's be clear.
Determinism
- The philosophical doctrine that every state of affairs, including every human event, act, and decision, is the inevitable consequence of antecedent states of affairs.
- The doctrine that the will is not free, but is inevitably and invincibly determined by motives, preceding events, and natural laws.
- The doctrine that all actions are determined by the current state and immutable laws of the universe, with no possibility of choice.
- The property of having behavior determined only by initial state and input.
- (philosophy) a philosophical theory holding that all events are inevitable consequences of antecedent sufficient causes; often understood as denying the possibility of free will.
So, is that to say that my deciding to do something other than what I intended to do, if determined by my thought processes that may weigh options, that one way or other is not determined by what is present or past, but future, or even initialized momentarily, eliminates free choice, or freewill?
Please be as clear as you possibly can.
You also said...
If we have no control over a decision then it obviously cannot be described as free will. The vast majority of the decisions 'we' make are made subconsciously. Just consider exactly what you are doing at this instant.
Are you claiming that no one has control over a decision they make?
So, the decision serve God, for example, is not one made with any control over that decision?
Please explain how you determine that to be true.
Of the girl who made a decision because of thinking of her future, and the future of her unborn child, you said...
If she is not coerced. In which case what she chooses will be what she prefers to do.
Is that to say, that a person can make a free-willed choice, if they are not coerced into making the decision, but made the choice, based on rational thought?
Please be as clear as you possibly can. I don't want to be confused.
The reasons you plant the tree are what determines your action. So, why did you plant it?
Did you mean what determines my choice?
Maybe you have somewhere you'd like to go that you haven't been to. Now you can change your mind about whether you go there or not. Maybe you haven't the time, or the money. Maybe transport is a problem. They're all antecedent conditions that will go to determine your choice. But you can't change your mind about wanting to go there. That would be as if you liked pizza but decided not to like it. It's not possible. So that's one of the antecedent conditions as well.
Maybe my future goals are what determined my decision, because I want to preach in the territory there.
Of course. She's not going to do something she doesn't prefer.
Now think of something that you'd rather do instead of going to work tomorrow. Can you then decide that you'd rather not do it?
Been there, done that. So, yes. It has been done, time and time again, by many people.
That makes no sense at all. You can decide whether to actually do it, but that's another matter which we'll get to in a moment. But you can't decide not to want to do it. Again, it would be the same as liking pizza and then deciding to not like it. It ain't possible.
Huh? That make no sense.
I can decide not to go to work, and I can decide to work.
As regards deciding not to want to do something, that has no relation to whether free will exists or not.
I can have free will - the freedom to choose to do something, and not like what I chose to do.
For, example, I may be terrified of preaching in a certain neighborhood - I may not like it, but I may choose to do it.
It is my choice to do so, even tough I am uncomfortable doing it. That is what will is, and the freedom to exercise it.
I think you are conflating two different things, though.
Now, there's a difference between doing something because you want to do it. And doing something because you prefer to do it. You actually may not want to do something, but you prefer to do it. You may not want to go to the gym as opposed to the pub because going to the pub is a lot more enjoyable. But you are determined (there's that word again) to lose some weight, so you prefer to go to the gym. So you always do what you prefer. You can't change that.
How can one prefer to do something they do not want to do?
how does that work?
No, you do not always do what you prefer.
Sometimes we do things because duty calls.
Do you think those firefighters in L.A. prefer to be in the het of things?
Do, soldiers prefer to be out their on the battle field, facing tanks and bombs?
Do cops prefer to be in a firefight, or to have to raid the house of a dangerous group?
So you want to do that something as opposed to go to work tomorrow. But you think that for umpteen reasons you'd better go to work instead. It's your preference. And you can't change that.
I am not seeing the logic in your reasoning.
So the girl in your example has a preference. For all sorts of reasons - and we can make up a few to examine if you like. But she will always do what she prefers to do. She can't change that.
No. Not from the many examples I used, and that girl may chose to have the baby, and give it up for adoption... not because she prefers to do that, rather than keep it, but because she thinks it is the better choice, for everyone involved.
She could also make a decision to terminate the life, not because it's what she prefers to do, but because she isn't thinking straight at the time... and she later regrets it, as is the case with millions of girls, and women living today.