This insight underscores the central issue, and the awkwardness of a Protestant tradition. The Christian understands free will to originate in the human soul… Behavioral psychology, a materialist/determinist ideology, considers the mind/soul to be a materialist epi-phenomenon, merely contingent upon the particles and fields that constitute the substance of the human body. If the soul is more than this, as the Church teaches, then actions can originate in the soul, in conjunction with, but not entirely attributable to, antecedent causes. Hence free will.
I’m neither a Protestant or Calvinist. Not that you implied that… just wanted to point it out.
I am a heavily questioning Catholic. Primarily, I suppose I just am looking for
evidence of the soul/mind that falls outside the realm of theological speculation and philosophical proofs with untestable premises.
Don’t get me wrong, there are
fantastic arguments out there. The problem I run into is verifying that these claims hold in reality. They all fall back on premises that just strike me as a bit odd sometimes. I presented links to some evidence above in which brain injuries are directly tied to
radical changes in personality, beliefs (both political and religious), recognition of loved ones, and all kinds of memory issues.
Does this
disprove the existence of immaterial minds? No.
Would it help if someone could fully function in the absence of a part of the brain typically associated with a given ability (speaking without portion x, writing without portion y, left/right side functions working without their respective portion z’s)? Absolutely.
So, evidentially, I propose that we’re left in a situation extremely similar to most other paths I’ve walked down: absence of evidence… but obviously not evidence of absence.
Does this strike anyone else as different? Should I abandon hope for physical manifestations or these phenomenon? Or will I always be constrained to trying to find loopholes in ‘all abstractions are based on objective realities we’ve experience. Since we can know about free will, we must have an experience of it’?
MindOverMatter2:
If you want to refute my argument, you have to provide a detailed way of how we can gain the concept of free will and at the same time make the meaningful distinction between freewill and determinism without first having conceptual and experiential knowledge its objective existence.
Also, as I said before, I wasn’t ever aiming to refute the existence of free well. We’re in agreement. I did not understand the argument and admit to skimming and then reading your final conclusion sentence. Thank you for spelling it out for me again. One issue… don’t we just need to have experience of
one of the concepts vs. both of them? I believe this is what you are saying, however you seem to be leaning on free will as the one exists vs. determinism. Couldn’t either exist to have a concept of the other?
Can I only think of what it would be like if the sun never shone because I’ve experienced both light and dark? Or could I contemplate what it would be like without light simply because I know light?
Also, how would this work if we regressed back in time? If one always has to learn based on previous building blocks… we should arrive at a first building block, right?
Hopefully I haven’t mis-construed your argument again! Again, I’m not disputing free will. I believe, however, that you are resting on needing free will to exist to even contemplate what determinism would be and logically, I don’t think there’s any need to give preference to free will to be the one that exists. Or am I wrong?