J
James_S_Saint
Guest
In this, I am defining “free” as “uncaused”, “evil” as “destructive to life”, and “will” as “exercising influence”.
What we call free will is a function of the mind’s ability to assess a situation, make a decision concerning how to respond and exercise influence based on that decision. A mind, in doing so, either uses information to make its decision or it doesn’t. If it doesn’t use information to make the decision, then it is ignoring reality, God, and its situation. Such decisions are necessarily amoral because they are not confined to what constitutes morality. What good comes of decisions that ignore the situation and reality itself?
If decisions are made based on information about the situation and reality, then the decision making process is not free from causal determinacy. Decisions are made for reasons and purposes rather than merely being made for no reason or purpose.
What people are calling free will (uncaused will) is a very bad thing paramount to evil. When an agent behaves in a random, unpredictable fashion, that agent cannot be trusted. It cannot be trusted to behave in either a bad or good way. That makes it dangerous and just statistically speaking would necessarily behave in a bad way eventually. It is very much like not having the lug nuts on a wheel. Eventually the wheel will come off while the car is being driven. The probability of that being a good thing is minuscule. Even if it is desired for the wheel to come off. it would make more sense to ensure that it would come off rather than leave it up to chance.
On rare occasions, randomness is desired even though such is actually impossible. But in those circumstances the random act is expected to be limited to a confined influence. If it is confined, then it is not free to create influence, but restricted to only influence the limited scope of concern. Thus even in such cases, the will of the agent is not free even though the direction of the decision is desired to be free from cause.
No matter how you cut it, uncaused free will is destructive to the effort to live and thus is evil.
What we call free will is a function of the mind’s ability to assess a situation, make a decision concerning how to respond and exercise influence based on that decision. A mind, in doing so, either uses information to make its decision or it doesn’t. If it doesn’t use information to make the decision, then it is ignoring reality, God, and its situation. Such decisions are necessarily amoral because they are not confined to what constitutes morality. What good comes of decisions that ignore the situation and reality itself?
If decisions are made based on information about the situation and reality, then the decision making process is not free from causal determinacy. Decisions are made for reasons and purposes rather than merely being made for no reason or purpose.
What people are calling free will (uncaused will) is a very bad thing paramount to evil. When an agent behaves in a random, unpredictable fashion, that agent cannot be trusted. It cannot be trusted to behave in either a bad or good way. That makes it dangerous and just statistically speaking would necessarily behave in a bad way eventually. It is very much like not having the lug nuts on a wheel. Eventually the wheel will come off while the car is being driven. The probability of that being a good thing is minuscule. Even if it is desired for the wheel to come off. it would make more sense to ensure that it would come off rather than leave it up to chance.
On rare occasions, randomness is desired even though such is actually impossible. But in those circumstances the random act is expected to be limited to a confined influence. If it is confined, then it is not free to create influence, but restricted to only influence the limited scope of concern. Thus even in such cases, the will of the agent is not free even though the direction of the decision is desired to be free from cause.
No matter how you cut it, uncaused free will is destructive to the effort to live and thus is evil.