G
glowingembers
Guest
Ok, so basically you say that will acts based on intellect but not solely based on intellect. I say that, to the extent that will does not act based on intellect (desires, intentions), the will is blind/unintentional, and so is the action that is determined by it. So our actions are determined by a combination of a basically blind, unintentional will and our intellect (desires, intentions). They are in general determined partly unintentionally and partly intentionally. But does this describe what we imagine as free will? The unintentional part hardly so, and the intentional part leads us to the causal influence of our desires and intentions, which are ultimately determined by something we neither desired nor intended.Evidently the intellect gives us many things to will about, hence it’s temporal priority in general. However it is by it’s overall logical priority that it the will is essentially determinate of the act; and not intellect. By logical priority here it is that the will is the first and foremost entity in the determination of an act of volition or nolition.
Whilst it is true that the intellect provides us things to will about; it does not determine nessecarily the acts of the will, as this is contrary to judgements and experiences.