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glowingembers
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They don’t give any argument, just assert that we obviously have free will.Free will was discussed in an interview with scientist Francis Collins and John Horgan. I agree with Francis Collins.
They don’t give any argument, just assert that we obviously have free will.Free will was discussed in an interview with scientist Francis Collins and John Horgan. I agree with Francis Collins.
Actions are not the result of a desire if by that you mean to say that a desire forces us to actualise a particular chain of events despite other possibilities. Actions are motivated by desires. We are presented with desire and we “choose” to act on them.It means that our actions are the result of our desires,
I don’t understand what you mean? We might begin with a desire, and we may very well require desires in order to motivate us, but we evidently have the power to act meaningfully for or against a desire. There is no good reason to doubt freewill in this sense of freewill.To say that there is a desire behind every choice does not add up to us not having freewill, once you understand that freewill is only meaningful in the context of desires and takes place within that context.But if you choose between them intentionally (which is a necessary condition for a free choice) then this choice itself must be the result of some desire.
So some chemical reaction in your brain told you that you don’t have freewill?I don’t need free will to doubt free will, because my doubts are caused by my awareness that free will is impossible.
Let me rephrase. If there is no sun and no moon, and you have never experienced a sun or a moon or anything like it and cannot see anything because you do not have any eyes, you are not going to see an illusion of a sun or a moon. In-order to identify a fake moon with a real moon you would have to have a meaningful experience of a real moon. Secondly to have an illusion of a moon is not the same as having the illusion of freewill. Nobody can show you freewill. You have to experience freewill in order to know about it. You have to know about freewill before you can consider the possibility that you don’t have it. In order to know that you are a slave you would have to have some understanding of being free; and you can’t have those experiences if such things don 't exist meaningfully in your experience. There is no more information in your mind than what we can sense, and what we fantasise or hallucinate about are created out of the things that we have already experienced. Out of nothing comes nothing; so where does this concept of freewill come from? It doesn’t come from you experiences and it certainly doesn’t come out of nothing.Why not? Someone may simply present him with a fake sun.
You know that you have freewill; otherwise you would not be trying to convince people that they don’t, since you would not know anything about it.Therefore the only rational conclusion is that we have freewill, although perhaps in a limited sense. Much more limited than the straw-man that you are arguing for.
What do you mean by other processes? either way you are talking about blind physical unintentional actions.Maybe it’s just a chemical reaction and maybe it’s also some other process.
Believe what you want, but you have provided no evidence to support that. You cannot freely prove that you have no freewill. Your actions are beyond the control of your mind. and thus don’t see any reason to take you seriously. You are just an object like any other object.And we are just observers who are so viscerally immersed in this process that we falsely believe we can control it.
It depends how you define intellect. I thought that John Damian includes desires under intellect, so if you move your hand away from the hot pan because of a desire to stop pain, it is driven by intellect. But I don’t think it’s relevant whether you categorize desires under “intellect” or under “will”. The relevant thing is that if a choice is not determined by a desire (or intention) then it cannot be free no matter what.Not always.
Case in point. If I touch my hand to a burning hot pan, it will instinctively jerk itself back off that hot object before the fact that it’s hot even registers to my intellect.
Is that act of my hand blind or unwilled? No way. That act of my hand is the result of my will to protect myself from further harm by further burning. But in this case the body bypasses the conscious intellect in order to do so more efficiently (since it takes a shorter time for pain receptors to send signals directly to the muscles of the hand than to go via the brain and then back out to the hand.)
So the act of the hand, although not consciously willed, certainly isn’t blind in any fashion.
It is obvious that “to deisre” is an equivocal term. It implies a bias or pull which when applied to a causal agent or active potency such as our will. Natural inclinations or desires of the will are as such a bias; but in the same way as the predication of natural to volition, the predication of natural to will effectivelly negates the sense of the will; and instead leaves that which is propositionally sensible in its relationshiip to its proper perfection; that is, the inclination of the will naturally is really distinct from the will.It depends how you define intellect. I thought that John Damian includes desires under intellect, so if you move your hand away from the hot pan because of a desire to stop pain, it is driven by intellect. But I don’t think it’s relevant whether you categorize desires under “intellect” or under “will”. The relevant thing is that if a choice is not determined by a desire (or intention) then it cannot be free no matter what.
If a choice does not follow from intention then it cannot be a free will choice no matter what.Somehow there is confusion between choice, reason, intellect, desire, action, non-action, emotions, subjective reasoning, etc., etc.
Choice is a decision which comes from the rational intellect. Desires come from the emotions or are emotional themselves. Desire usually has an object. One can chose to go to bed and act on that decision because being tired one desires sleep. Basic survival instincts and habits can result in automatic actions.
If X is one’s free choice, that choice is made in the intellect which is a faculty or power of the soul. The soul does not depend on an infinite regress of desires.
And why would we choose to act on them? Because we are driven by the desire, and so the action is determined by the desire. If, on the other hand, we act contrary to this desire, then (1) our action is driven by the desire to act contrary to the first desire, or (2) our action is not driven by the desire to act contrary to the first desire, which means that we act without an intention to act so.Actions are not the result of a desire if by that you mean to say that a desire forces us to actualise a particular chain of events despite other possibilities. Actions are motivated by desires. We are presented with desire and we “choose” to act on them.
Yeah? And you have to see Santa Claus in order to know about him. You know about Santa Claus, hence Santa Claus exists. Otherwise, who could ever come up with the idea of Santa Claus, if Santa Claus didn’t exist? Is that what you meant to say?You have to experience freewill in order to know about it.
I mean any logical processes in general, not just physical.What do you mean by other processes? either way you are talking about blind physical unintentional actions.
What do you mean by logical processes?I mean any logical processes in general, not just physical.
It is evident that you can choose either to do the right thing or the wrong thing. It is evident to me that I can choose not to act against something that I want to do because I know that it is wrong. I choose something “because” I desire the good of it, but “I” am choosing it never the less; not the desire. The desire does not choose anything. I don’t see why desire stops us from freely choosing what is right just because the choice is motivated by some kind of desire? Like I said before, I do not know what you mean by freewill.And why would we choose to act on them? Because we are driven by the desire, and so the action is determined by the desire. If, on the other hand, we act contrary to this desire, then (1) our action is driven by the desire to act contrary to the first desire, or (2) our action is not driven by the desire to act contrary to the first desire, which means that we act without an intention to act so.
Since you are so good at making straw-men, you tell me. Is that what i really meant?Yeah? And you have to see Santa Claus in order to know about him. You know about Santa Claus, hence Santa Claus exists. Otherwise, who could ever come up with the idea of Santa Claus, if Santa Claus didn’t exist? Is that what you meant to say?
If a choice does not follow from intention then it cannot be a free will choice no matter what.
Here, there is the implication that desire and intention are the same. In the practical world, desires can exist subjectively without ever becoming an intentional willed choice. Note that the adjective form of intention can be applied to the willed choice but is not the same as the choice itself.OP 1. If X is my free choice, it must be determined by my desire (intention) Y.
The Catholic Church indeed recognizes that there is conflict between an individual’s desires and freedom. As Saint Paul wrote:
- If X is my free choice, it must be determined by my desire (intention) Y.
NOTE: this is a necessary condition for a free choice, because if my choice is not determined by my desire (intention) then it happens without my desire (intention) and so is unintentional.- If I don’t choose my desire Y freely, then my choice X is determined by something I didn’t choose freely and hence X is not my free choice.
- If I choose my desire Y freely, then it must be determined by my desire Y2 (according to point no. 1).
- If I don’t choose my desire Y2 freely, then my choice Y and consequently X is determined by something I didn’t choose freely and hence X is not my free choice.
- If I choose my desire Y2 freely, then it must be determined by my desire Y3 (according to point no. 1). And so on. It’s an infinite regress or there is a first desire that is not determined by another desire and is therefore not freely chosen. Hence, my choice X is never free.
Any process that is logically possible. This is the level on which I argue against free will because I don’t think that free will is logically possible.What do you mean by logical processes?
But if your choice follows from your desire (which is given to you), what else can you do than what follows from the desire? You can imagine that you control your action - because you perceive your desire as a visceral part of yourself while lacking or suppressing perception of how the desire originated - but in reality you are only an intermediary between the desire and the action.It is evident that you can choose either to do the right thing or the wrong thing. It is evident to me that I can choose not to act against something that I want to do because I know that it is wrong. I choose something “because” I desire the good of it, but “I” am choosing it never the less; not the desire. The desire does not choose anything. I don’t see why desire stops us from freely choosing what is right just because the choice is motivated by some kind of desire? Like I said before, I do not know what you mean by freewill.
If you don’t think that desire and intention are basically the same thing then I recommend that while you read my OP you simply substitute the word “desire” with the word “intention”.Here, there is the implication that desire and intention are the same. In the practical world, desires can exist subjectively without ever becoming an intentional willed choice. Note that the adjective form of intention can be applied to the willed choice but is not the same as the choice itself.
Whatever this freedom is, it cannot be a freedom in the sense of having ultimate control over your choices.This is why true freedom consists in recognizing one’s dependence on God, as John Paul the Great wrote:
In that case, it is very doubtful that the OP pertains to human beings, in my humble observation.If you don’t think that desire and intention are basically the same thing then I recommend that while you read my OP you simply substitute the word “desire” with the word “intention”.
I think you’ve confused freedom with pride: the desire for “ultimate control.” We’re contingent beings, and as such, we rely on God for the actualization of our full potential. "For how could it be an exercise of true freedom to refuse to be open to the very reality which enables our self-realization? (JPII, Fides et Ratio, page 21) Your desire for “ultimate control” is what has taken away your freedom.Whatever this freedom is, it cannot be a freedom in the sense of having ultimate control over your choices.
By “not having ultimate control” I didn’t mean lacking some God-like power but that ultimately your choice is not determined by you at all. So whatever freedom we have, it is not a freedom of choosing our actions, because they are ultimately chosen by something else over which we have no control. That’s the point of my argument.I think you’ve confused freedom with pride: the desire for “ultimate control.” We’re contingent beings, and as such, we rely on God for the actualization of our full potential. "For how could it be an exercise of true freedom to refuse to be open to the very reality which enables our self-realization? (JPII, Fides et Ratio, page 21) Your desire for “ultimate control” is what has taken away your freedom.
Hope this helps,
-Ryan Vilbig
ryan.vilbig@gmail.com
What is a logical process?Any process that is logically possible. This is the level on which I argue against free will because I don’t think that free will is logically possible.
As I said, any process that is logically possible.What is a logical process?