DoubtingThomas29 said:
I believe I can actually prove the answer to the opethian's question in the affirmative. I might have to take more philosophy classes after this.
You see I know you have heard of artificial intelligence, well there has been some head way on it, and some robots that have been built do have free will. I'll give you an example and we will answer your question in the affirmative.
There were two robots built. They had exactly the same programing and even the same look to each other. They were made of the same plastic and metal, but whatis important to remember is that they were built by the same computer programmer and team of technicians. These robots had exactly the same programming and method for making decisions, nothing was different between the two at all, in their programming.
Here is what happen, they were cleaning a room and they came to a task where only one robot could complete one of the chore and both robots came together and both knew it had to be done, and both knew only one could do it, however both could do it in exactly the same way. The two robots then decided on who would complete this task and who would go off and do something else. This is how advanced science has come, it is absolutely amazing. These robots had free will to decide on who would do what.
This is certainly not free will as I defined it in my opening post. You see, those 2 robots will never receive the exact same input from their environment at any given time. On top of that, there will always be tiny differences in their construction, leading to differences in the processing of already different input information. Something that would prove free will, is two robots, each in completely identical, seperate universes, at the exact same time and the exact same space (from the perspective of the identical universes), doing 2 different things. There are many simple explanations for your robot example. One explanation could be, since the 2 robots would be in a different place in the room, that they calculated which robot already had the best position to start cleaning, and acted accordingly. As far as I can tell, there's nothing special about these robots, at least in regards to free will.
So here is a fact, if some how some super smart scientist could build a robot that had exactly everything in it's programming that makes it mind/Central Processing Unit the same as your mind, and the scientist sent the robot over to your house to help you clean it. You have no idea what the robot is going to want to clean first, because it has free will to clean whatever it wants to.
No, it will calculate what is best for it to clean first, in the same way that humans do. There will be differences in past experiences and environmental input, and body structure, therefore it is possible for you and the robot to make a different "decision", or should I say calculation.
It is true, you have no way of knowing, because you have free will and the robot has free will, so you both can do as you please cleaning what ever you want.
And what you want to clean first depends on what, from your perspective, is best to clean first. Your perspective is different from the robot's because of your different environmental input, past experiences, and body structure.
This is why if there is a God, there is no way he can predict the future of any human while they are alive. The human can make a choice as to what it wants or feel it must do, and God can in no way predict what this person, or even a robot with free will is going to do.
If there is an omniscient god, he should be perfectly able to predict what humans or robots are going to do (he/she/it would have created the universe so should know a way around the uncertainty principle, and as we all know, this uncertainty goes for all matter, and free will from a human perspective is only relevant when talking about conscious beings, so uncertainty as a possible source of free will has no relevance, as we need a source limited to conscious beings).
God may be able to say to a certain degree of likely hood what this person may do but nothing definite, he probably could not even give you probabilities to likely hood of out comes. Nor can the scientist with the artifically intelligent robots she or he programs.
I really don't see how you can rationally come to this conclusion.
With free will the person has a choice and can base that choice on any number of things, what ever it's will is at the moment.
Its "will" is the result of what it conceives to be best. What it conceives to be best is dependant on the information it receives and the way it processes this information. It has one outcome (when disregarding uncertainty, for reasons already stated). There is a perceived choice, by way of evaluating information which is constantly changing, and processing it, but the outcome is determined.
I think your argument is quite flawed, but it was interesting to read.