alpha wrote:Hobbes' Choice wrote:Wrong wrong wrong. All our choices are by definition wholly ours. We are caused by a range of factors from genes, environment, social programming ad infinitem.
But your problem is you idea of 'self', 'we', 'us', 'ours'. What we are is what we have been determined to be. ANd the self is a caused and causal agent.
alpha wrote:hobbes, a rock too affects its environment, but no idiot calls it "self-determining". i also have issue with the phrase "can affect"; the environment "must affect" the human, and the human "must affect" the environment in exactly the same way the environment "must affect" a rock, and a rock "must affect its environment. again, just because a human is much much more complex than a rock, that doesn't change the absolutely strict causality inside and outside of the human. the human has no actual choice but to do (or not do) what he does (or doesn't do). so if you were to live your life (with exactly the same initial genes, exactly the same environment and circumstances, and so on) 999 trillion times, the outcome would be exactly the same to a tee every single time. if you dispute this, then you're nothing more than a libertarian who's a wannabe determinist.
Hobbes' Choice wrote:A rock is immobile. There is nothing else to say
A choice is a set of alternative that are offered for examination by "OUR" programming, and a selection based on a rational and emotional response concerning the possible outcome and consequences is made. This is determined by our ever changing experience. This is nothing like an automaton, which has no motivation.
hobbes, i really don't know how to make people like you and leo understand simple concepts. do you disagree with the underlined part of my statement above? if you do, then i'm speechless
I agree fully with that statement, which would be true what ever you might think of free will and determinism. It could not be any other way.
. if you don't, then we are automatons. so called choices are not made by reasoning etc..
We are not automata, for the cogent reasons I already laid out before you. In the same way a rock is not a tree, is not an animal, is not a bunch of bananas.
the fact of the matter is that a human is subjected to countless forces, both internal and external, none of which are by choice, and the stronger force -in any given situation (the force that is stronger at the time)- always wins. the person simply experiences the struggle among the forces and thinks that he's actually making some sort of choice or decision. sorry, but i'm afraid it's all illusory.
Exactly, determined by conditions NOT PREDICTABLE BY HIS INITIAL GENETIC SET UP - which you objected to.
Given that the entire universe is deterministic, and given the fact that in ordinary parlance humans are confronted with determined situations that change their determined pathways, by
decisions they have determinedly made, we call this situations 'choices'. Each situation it not predicted by the fact that they are a human, whereas outcomes are predicted by being rocks and automata; humans each respond in "their" "own way". The deterministic outcome of all such situations are called choices. In the same way a computer makes a choice. In a tiny minority of programs this can change their programming; in humans this always changes their programming, and to be human is to change.
The human is thus a causal black-box, and has within its boundaries intentions and motivations; this is what we call the will. Obviously enough it is nor 'free' but it makes perfect sense to understand our determined actions as choices of the will.
Seriously I think I was where you are with this about 20 years ago. Before I'd understood a more subtle understanding of the consequences of determinism and the use of language.
If you want to insist that 'its all an illusion', then obviously you can follow that thought; everything you think and perceive, by this rubric is an illusion; I don't exist, the the computer you are looking at is a figment of your imagination.
But since I like to think that the world I have constructed in my head relates more or less to a hard reality it is clear that I have a perceptual apparatus in which choices are made assessed against an internal structure of intentionality and limited by the perceived environment around me.
The
will as delusion is a good argument against an omnipotent force, who pretends to give us free will, but clearly since god has to have known since the beginning of time that I would die a sinner, and in that knowledge he has created me thus- where is free will now?
Aside from that we see people making choices determinedly, and when we don't like it (determined by our ever changing program) we can react determinedly to that. The future might be predictable but it is far too complex to compute, so what's the problem here? We are changing the future with each choice we make, like a storm that breaks down tree, that were previously determined to grow.