Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Jan 27, 2020 5:29 pm
... The way to virtue is reason; not obedience ...
I don't blame you ...
I need no supernatural add-on called 'Free Will' in order to explain virtue.
There may be a bit of a semantic problem here. Perhaps you can explain it.
I agree that reason, not obedience, is the way to virtue, but how can one, "reason," if everything they think and do is, "determined?" You told IC, you don't blame him, but if you do not choose what you do, it would not be "you" that does no blame him, but whatever determined the non-blaming, wouldn't it?
One problem I see is that phrase, "free will." You are right if you think that idea comes from religion and is mostly wrong. That is the reason I use the term, "volition," which means that everything a human being thinks and does must be consciously chosen. It does not mean being able to choose anything one likes, but, if one is to think anything they must choose to think it and if they are to do anything they must choose to do it, and what one chooses must be consciously chosen.
You know reason is the way to virtue, and to reason you must be able to make judgments. When considering two conflicting ideas, for example, deciding which is correct and which is incorrect requires you to make a judgment based on whatever you know about the question. Don't you have to consciously make that judgment. A judgment is a conscious choice between two alternatives. If not, are you simply a bystander observing what goes on in your mind without having choice about it?
There is nothing mystical or supernatural about the concept of volition. It simply means that within the limits of what you know and what you are mentally and physically able to do, to do anything you can and must consciously choose to do it. It also means everything you do you have chosen to do, and that makes you responsible for everything you do, but only to yourself.