But I would argue that this merely suggests that we may need to clarify what we mean by a free will choice. Are free will choices simply those choices that rise to the level of conscious reasoning? Is this a capacity that other animals lack? If so then what does this capacity to reason afford us if not the ability to consider the implications of our choices, and then to consciously choose between them based upon those implications? And is it really a misnomer to refer to these consciously derived choices as free will choices.
We can reason. Other animals can't. What does that ability to reason gain us?
I agree that we need to clarify what we mean by a 'free will choice' - that is what I've been asking you to do in this conversation. When I use it, I generally mean a choice that
feels free from explicit coercion or restraint. I say 'feels' because I think it is subjective, as we all internalise societal (including moral) constraints of varying kinds to varying degrees and these differ across cultures.
ISTM that if a choice
feels coerced or constrained, we must be conscious of it, so it would seem that choices we are not consciously aware of can be called (or assumed to be) free will choices by my definition (i.e. that is how they'd feel if we were aware of making them).
There are, of course, many other definitions of 'free will', which is why I've ben pressing you to explain what
you mean by it.
Reasoning allows us to go beyond the simple heurustics of System 1 (unconscious, fast, easy, intuitive) thinking, providing greater flexibility and specificity in problem-solving. In conjunction with our ability to project forward and backward in time, it allows us to learn key lessons from our successes and failures and to plan ahead by visualising potential futures (temporal counterfactuals

). It also allows us to better predict what others are likely to do, by combining what we know of their character traits with what we would do in their situation, and to better understand what they may know about, or expect of, us - e.g. what we know that they know that we know they know... Language helps us perform extended reasoning by manipulating concepts as symbols.
Nevertheless, reasoning delegates much of the donkey work to unconscious processes.
As for conscious choices, I think it's more a process of making explicit what the unconscious ('elephant') wants to do. At best, our reasoning provides more options for the unconscious to consider. When we become aware of the results, we can tell ourselves that this is what we want to do. Our conscious selves are given (or take) credit for good choices, and the unconscious is often blamed for bad choices.
My preferred analogy for the relationship between conscious & unconscious is that the conscious is like the public figurehead of a large company, with lawyers continually offering advice, reports from the various departments, and a PR unit keeping him updated with events. He thinks he's running things and interacts with the world on that basis, presenting a polished impression of the company as a single unified entity rather than a diverse collection of (often competing) departments, personally taking credit for successes and blaming internal problems for failures. YMMV
In short, I don't think there are such things as 'consciously-derived choices'; consciousness establishes and/or reflects our unconscious choices, much as an election establishes who the people want to be governed by.
Even if Schopenhauer is right, and "A man can do what he wants, but not want what he wants.", does the fact that a man can also consider the implications of what he wants mean that Schopenhauer was only partly right?
I don't think so. It's true that reasoning can reveal implications that may cause us to reconsider what we want, e.g. something that we dislike more than what we wanted, or something that we want more than our initial want, but that's just discovering what we want when we are more fully informed - that's a major part of how reasoning helps in decision-making.
It's analogous to the role of science in decision-making - it can inform decisions but can't make the decision for you - that depends on what you
want.
So I'll revise my previous argument that consciousness is the harbinger of free will to further stipulate that consciousness augmented by the ability to reason leads to free will.
Unfortunately we're then back to Schopenhauer again, because a man can freely choose between the things he consciously considers, but he can't choose the things he consciously considers.
A bit of a conundrum wouldn't you say?
I don't think Schopenhauer's aphorism is a conundrum, but I can't say whether your interpretation leads to one because you haven't yet said what you mean by a free will choice... But if your logic or reasoning leads to a conundrum or contradiction, that suggests there may be a flaw in it
It hearkens back to the garden of Eden wherein Adam and Eve had to weigh the merits of two choices. Ultimately I don't think that it was the choice that mattered so much as it was the fact that they had the ability to weigh them that mattered. Because it's that ability to weigh one's choices that allows one to differentiate between "good" and "evil". And that I might suggest, is the hallmark of free will.
A chess computer can evaluate the potential moves in a given position and weigh them against its criteria for a 'good' or 'bad' move, but I don't think that gives it free will.
I thought that the problem with the story of Adam and Eve was that they
couldn't weigh the merits of their choices
until they had eaten from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, by which time it was too late...
