Free Will

Is the mind the same as the body? What is consciousness? Can machines have it?

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henry quirk
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Re: Free Will

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Skepdick wrote: Fri Aug 13, 2021 4:52 pm
henry quirk wrote: Fri Aug 13, 2021 4:31 pm
Skepdick wrote: Fri Aug 13, 2021 2:58 pm
That's what I am saying. The "before" exists only in your head.
No, it doesn't.
👆 Look what we have here.

A post from henry. In the this very present moment .

Where is the "before"?
This thread, like any other here, is a testimony to the past, the reality of it. All these posts, none were written or posted simultaneously. The sequence of them, on the screen, mirrors the sequence of posting. Each is an artifact of then, just as this one is, or will be.

Anyway, I'm waitin' on TS to answer...you, as entertaining as you are, have a limited shelf life for me. I'll let someone else play with you now.
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Re: Free Will

Post by Skepdick »

henry quirk wrote: Fri Aug 13, 2021 5:02 pm This thread, like any other here, is a testimony to the past, the reality of it. All these posts, none were written or posted simultaneously. The sequence of them, on the screen, mirrors the sequence of posting. Each is an artifact of then, just as this one is, or will be.
A testimony to the past is not the past.

You delete the database of this forum and this thread (and all threads) *poof* !
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RCSaunders
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Re: Free Will

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Terrapin Station wrote: Fri Aug 13, 2021 1:31 pm
RCSaunders wrote: Thu Aug 12, 2021 4:40 pm It doesn't do anything but identify existents as the actual existents they are. I have no idea what, "range over," means. Perhaps if you think of a universal concept as a kind of short-hand. If I'm cooking and ask my wife to hand me the yellow pot, since the concept pot means anything with all the attributes of a pot, saying, "pot," saves me the necessity of describing every detail of the pot except the one, (yellow) that differentiates the one I mean from all others. The universal concept, pot, means all actual pots with all their possible attributes, with nothing left out.
So first, a term for leaving out some details so that we have words like "pot" that can pick out multiple items (that's basically what "ranging over" means) is an "abstraction."

And actually every word that can work this way, including words like "yellow," are abstractions.
If all you mean by, "abstractions," is the fact that universals subsume all existents with the same essential attributes, I have no objection to that.

What most of those who refer to universal concepts as, "abstractions," mean is some notion of concepts being incomplete representation of existents, which is then used the imply our knowledge by means of concepts is incomplete, because no concept is ever a perfect representation of anything real. But a concept does not, "represent," or. "stand in for," or, "take the place of," the existent it refers to, it only identifies (points to or isolates from all other existents) what the concept refers to. The concept means the actual existents with all their attributes and properties, not some vague or incomplete, "picture," of an existent. All out knowledge about entities, for example, is knowledge about the entities identified by the concepts, not the concepts. All a concept must do to be valid is to correctly identify existents in terms of those attributes that are that existent, or kind of existent, which differentiate them from all other possible existents.

The idea of, "abstraction," in epistemology originally came from the fact that words (i.e. any kind of symbol used to represent a concept) is usually a kind of, "abstract," picture, often of an actual thing. But, a word is not a concept, it is only a means of articulating, thinking about, or recording a concept.
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Re: Free Will

Post by RogerSH »

Belinda wrote: Thu Aug 12, 2021 11:00 pm ..... I may have missed your point. As I see it divergence is also causation. Determinism does not imply predictability due to chaotic complexity of nature. Laboratory experiments have variables strictly controlled so experiments are artefacts that symbolise ideas.

Free Will if it existed would lead one to exceedingly unfree choice, as, if a choice were to be uncaused it would be a random choice. The only way we can increase our freedom of choice is via reasoning and knowledge . I do agree brain, i.e. matter ,and mind are two sides of the same coin which is nature.
Yes, I'm saying that divergent causation (in a universe with quantum effects), which is typically chaotic, has unpredictable and, indeed, unpredetermined consequences, despite the instantaneous determinsim at everyday scales. ('Complexity' in a formal mathematical sense is something different). Your comments on lab experiments apply equally to simulations.

The only definition of formal free will that I think is logically coherent is that my will is free in some context if there is more than one alternative action which I could take if I chose to do so - which doesn't require any assumptions about determinism, one way or the other. But I agree that an uncaused choice could not be an exercise of will. There are barriers to free will in a psychological sense that I considered in another topic: "The difference between formal and psychological freedom of will" viewtopic.php?f=10&t=33083
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Re: Free Will

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RCSaunders wrote: Fri Aug 13, 2021 5:12 pm What most of those who refer to universal concepts as, "abstractions," mean is some notion of concepts being incomplete representation of existents, which is then used the imply our knowledge by means of concepts is incomplete, because no concept is ever a perfect representation of anything real.
That would be reading a whole mess of stuff into what I'm saying--a whole mess of stuff that I didn't say anything at all in the vein of.
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Re: Free Will

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Terrapin Station wrote: Fri Aug 13, 2021 8:39 pm
RCSaunders wrote: Fri Aug 13, 2021 5:12 pm What most of those who refer to universal concepts as, "abstractions," mean is some notion of concepts being incomplete representation of existents, which is then used the imply our knowledge by means of concepts is incomplete, because no concept is ever a perfect representation of anything real.
That would be reading a whole mess of stuff into what I'm saying--a whole mess of stuff that I didn't say anything at all in the vein of.
Good! I just wanted to make sure. I wasn't accusing you of that, but it's so common I had no way of knowing that is not what you meant by, "abstraction."
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Re: Free Will

Post by Belinda »

RogerSH wrote:
The only definition of formal free will that I think is logically coherent is that my will is free in some context if there is more than one alternative action which I could take if I chose to do so - which doesn't require any assumptions about determinism, one way or the other. But I agree that an uncaused choice could not be an exercise of will. There are barriers to free will in a psychological sense that I considered in another topic: "The difference between formal and psychological freedom of will"
The problem with voluntarism is that even a minute piece of will that is uncaused would make your choice random . Free Will proper is defined by an action's origin with the subject and nowhere else. You can see how belief in Free Will enables the believer to blame .
As a matter of fact few are restrained enough never to blame another person or impersonal circumstances. However the more people find out about the causes of what is done the more they can do something about stopping it happening again. And the more you know about the causes of something good the more you can make it happen. Therein lies freedom proper, not with this ghostly Free Will thingy.
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Re: Free Will

Post by Skepdick »

RogerSH wrote: Fri Aug 13, 2021 5:35 pm The only definition of formal free will that I think is logically coherent is that my will is free in some context if there is more than one alternative action which I could take if I chose to do so - which doesn't require any assumptions about determinism, one way or the other.
There can be no "formal and logically coherent" definition of "free will" without a definition for "formal", "logical" and "coherent".

And all of those three are adjectives. They are judgments.
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Re: Free Will

Post by jayjacobus »

Determinists are pessimists. They think that fate is against them and there is nothing they can do about it.

The optimist knows that the future is unknowable but he is confident that he can overcome most obstacles.

Sing a simple song of freedom or get away from me.
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Re: Free Will

Post by Belinda »

jayjacobus wrote: Sun Aug 15, 2021 4:54 pm Determinists are pessimists. They think that fate is against them and there is nothing they can do about it.

The optimist knows that the future is unknowable but he is confident that he can overcome most obstacles.

Sing a simple song of freedom or get away from me.
The alternative to determinism is Free Will.

Some but not all determinists are fatalists.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Free Will

Post by Immanuel Can »

Again, my apologies for the delay, Roger...I've been offline for some time. I'm back now, and your insightful thoughts merit first consideration.
RogerSH wrote: Fri Aug 06, 2021 5:40 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue Aug 03, 2021 3:25 pm
RogerSH wrote: Tue Aug 03, 2021 1:37 pm Identity through time is a special case of causation: something is as it is at a later time because that it is how it was at earlier times.

It's actually not. Identity (using the word to refer to sameness, not human "identity") does not cause anything. It's simply a recognition that an item at this chronological time is the same one as at a prior chronological time.

But nothing in that relationship has been "caused." It's purely descriptive.
The point is that identity over time, assuming that it is a necessary identity and not a purely contingent one, is a special case of causation. If something is in state S1 at time T1 and also at later time T2, but would be in state S2 at T2 if it was in state S2 at T1, that is a necessary identity, then the later state is determined by the earlier one.
It's not a causal relation, though. It is not true to say that my identity at T1 caused me to be me at T2. Rather, identity picks out a particular ontological (not causal) feature: namely, that I am me at both times.

So it's not right to say T1 "determined" how T2 would be. It's just that it would be the same entity implicated at two different times and in two different states.

This is actually routine. If somebody sees a picture of an 8-year-old child holding up a fish he's caught, and he asks, "Who is that?" he's not being misled if you say, "That's me." You were 8 when you caught the fish; maybe you're 48 now. But you were the same entity, and the eight-year-old was not causally responsible for you being the 48-year-old. You were the same entity, at two different times, and in two different states.

So no, identity isn't any kind of case or subset of causality at all. It's not a "special case of causation." It's a case of identity.
Among the things that might influence the choice are: personal preferences; knowledge of the situation in hand and of the likely consequences of each possible choice; lessons gained from experience; some new insight gained by combining past observations; previous mental commitments (e.g. on moral grounds) to make such a choice in a particular way; and so on. You may not have been aware of some of these things, but nevertheless they enter your conscious state when you turn your mind to the matter in hand. These are all things that make up the resources of your personal consciousness, that make it YOUR choice in particular.
But it's not an exhaustive list that you have given here.

We must include such things as, "intuition," or "creativity," or "acting on an intention to produce something new." And what about "fear of possibilities," or "curiosity"? There are lots more mental states that those you've listed.

Of course…which is why I said “and so on”! But in each case they must have arisen out of something that was already in your mind, not anyone else’s. My intuition won’t help your decisions. My feeling curious won’t motivate your exploration.
Well, nobody suggested that.

But what I'm pointing out is that it's misleading to say they "must have arisen out of something that was already in your mind." Because stuff that's "in a mind" is not "in material reality" the way that, say, neurochemicals are. In creativity, for example, the creative mind imagines something new, or a new combination of things already known, but one that has not yet existed anywhere. Or in the case of fear, maybe I imagine outcomes that have not ever come into existence and never will...as when I fear that bad diet will kill me by the age of 70, whereas I am going to be killed by a streetcar next week, or else live to 95. The relations in these things are not causal...or if we imagine they are, there is no explanation that has so far been given that makes that supposition plausible.

And this is why something like Guernica is so remarkable, in this connection. It is a conception of Picasso's, and we do not have any reason to suppose Braque or Cezanne, let alone any lesser or more distant artists, cold have produced it, even if we gave them a billion years. It would just never have come into their minds to do it.
Well, though, the truth is that that claim is merely presumptive, not demonstrable. In point of fact, many of them, like the ones I've listed, appear to project new realities, not simply achingly play out old lines of cause. It looks very much like creative mind-states project into reality things that have not yet existed, and then are somehow capable of creating them in reality, in the physical world.

Explaining novelty is a problem for the inanimate world just as much as for the living one. The former is full of things that didn’t exist at the big bang. There must have been a moment when a soap bubble appeared in the universe for the very first time, for example. This was not the result of somebody imagining it.

Well, hold on: that's presumptive, too.

According to Genesis, God imagined everything that exists. Now, you may say that, as a matter of your own belief, that didn't happen. Okay. But you can't say that it's obvious that the first soap bubble "had" to come into being arbitrarily. There is a way of understanding the situation, and one I believe is right, that soap bubbles and everything else are indeed products of the Divine "imagination," or better, "creativity."

If the first soap bubble came into being at all, it's a marvel...and one that surely is hard to explain in terms of any random theory of evolution. For why should there have been an entity so complex and subtle...or heck, so intelligible at all...as a soap bubble or as a cosmos, if there's no intelligence behind the cosmos? We should rather expect chaos. That we don't observe that -- and that we are here to observe at all -- should argue powerfully for the God hypothesis, really.
[I’ve moved this quote down a bit] Are you familiar with Jaegwon Kim's ideas on this? … Is that your view?
I’m not familiar with that name, but brain => mind isn’t my view anyway,
Well, that's not the point, really. The point is that if we use materials as an explanation for mind, then we are faced with the problem that mind genuinely seems to be capable of "causing" things in its own right.

And if it can, then the existence of non-determined will is a reality.
...if we confine it to the sense that the effect follows the cause, that clearly cannot apply to the monist account of the mind/brain relationship.

Right. A materialist, physicalist or other such monist cannot account for any causal role for "mind." And yet, we all think it has one, and can find a plethora of cases in which that supposition is not only the most useful and functional one, but where it's the only one that makes sense of the event.

For example, you and I are discussing right now. But if our opinions are already predetermined by our brain structure, then what is the causal role of our arguing? You can't "change my mind," and I can't "change" yours, in that case. :shock:

But we both think we could, or at least that the two of us could come to a new understanding by discussion. So we are both acting as if "mind" is a causal agent, and "will" is involved. And I think the burden is on the materialist, monist, or brain-advocate to show that we are fooling ourselves, and how it is happening -- especially, since only a free will can be "fooled." :shock:

Think about that. It just doesn't work, does it?
But we certainly need to talk about higher levels of structural organisation to be remotely intelligible.
No, I think that's a category error. Complexity does not create intelligence. A pile of three rocks is very simple. A pile of a thousand is much more complex. A pile of a ten thousand rocks assembled into a ziggurat is much more "organized." But all three are just rock. There's no "intelligence" involved in producing the rising complexity or even the organization; rather, the only intelligence in the equation is introduced by the already-intelligent builders of the ziggurat.

This is one of the things that fools "virtual intelligence" advocates. They are not such fools as to think that their abacus or pocket calculator is "intelligent," but somehow they suppose that a modern computer is not just doing something more complex and differently organized than the former, but that it's actually doing something that is substantively new...becoming "intelligent" thereby.

That's not what's happening, obviously. It's just that the computations have reached a level of complexity sufficient to confuse and fool ordinary folks. It's a "Turing" achievement, but not actually any instance of "intelligence."
Just because we can’t trace the web of mental causes doesn’t mean that it is absent.
No, but it doesn't give us any warrant to believe it's present. To all appearances, Picasso's achievement is unique. We would need some sort of scientific reason to think that that impression is wrong. And so far, we have none at all.
But the important point is that you seem to agree that decisions reflecting a will are not uncaused, just differently caused, and that difference involves consciousness - hence, in a sense, being caused by the whole person.
I think that's not quite it.

What we are debating, I think is whether or not "will" really describes any part of a causal chain, or whether "will" is just a sort of uninformative, misleading, unhelpful and unnecessary way to speak of the inevitable physical connection between prior causes and irresistible future effects.

The monist has to think that "will" doesn't actually describe anything. (Ironically, it is "he" who will "think" it doesn't.) He has to think that Picasso's "will" never rightly entered the chain of true explanations for Guernica's existence.
But the objection then reverses savagely. For if I am nothing but the sum of prior physical forces, THEN what is the basis of my alleged "responsibility"? There is no "me," no "I" to be responsible for anything. A long chain of prior causes forced to be done what was done. There is no personal agency in there for us to blame, and none to praise if "good" things happen, either.
I’m sorry but I simply do not buy that theory of responsibility!
Then neither do you "buy" the theory of reward or praise. If you are not "responsible" for something good happening, then neither is it any credit to you when it does.
...in a nutshell, we can be responsible for a decision if and only if we are conscious of making it. Responsibility cannot be separated from consciousness.

But in a monist world, there was no "you" to be "responsible" anyway. "Consciousness" does not describe any actual feature of causal chains, according to Determinism. It's not variable (free), and does not add any cause-effect content to the description.
but if [3] we also assume away quantum uncertainty,
We don't need to: it's actually irrelevant to the question. Quantum uncertainty does not tell us anything about how the will operates. [/quote]
Well, the Hammeroff/Penrose theory suggests exactly that it does[/quote]
No, it doesn't. If quantum mechanics is the explanation of consciousness, then consciousness is no more than a random product of the physical world. We are playthings of random chance, not mechanical causes, perhaps; but we still have absolutely no volition of our own. We're just slaves to a different -- and much less predictable -- master.
One way of looking at it is that determinism can be expressed as constancy of information within the system. Implementing a decision made outside the system would add information to the system, which contravenes the assumed constancy, so is ruled out.

Whoa!

What that says is, "We want to believe in consistency," so anything that "contravenes the assumed constancy" will just be "ruled out." That's the very opposite of respecting whatever the data is...it's assuming a conclusion, then rejecting all the data that challenges it. That has no smattering of real science in it.
...what I claim to have demonstrated here is that a dualist who accepts that mental events are (differently) connected causally, should accept that the combined universe comprising the material world plus the mental world could be deterministic, without denying free will to the mental world.
I think that's obviously self-contradictory. And it's very dualistic. You've already required, in your premises, the belief in the existence of "the material world" plus "the mental world." That's two. That's dualism.

What you need for Determinism is to collapse the explanation "the mental world" into "the material world," so you can believe in just one of the two. If there are actually two distinct realms, you're a dualist. And if you believe in any "free will" at all...in any situation, anytime...then you're not a Determinist.

Sorry again for the delay. I hope the response makes up for it a bit.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Free Will

Post by Immanuel Can »

Belinda wrote: Sat Aug 07, 2021 9:46 am The use of academic jargon is that it seals off the byways of interminable wrangling about what people mean.
Orwell thought not.

He said it was a weak-thinker's way of hiding stupid ideas from being exposed by their own stupidity. And indeed, that is often what it has become. He was not wrong. Try reading a lot of literature in the humanities today, and you'll find that it's often laced with words so long and awkward that, for those of us who can read carefully, you'll soon see that even the writers have no idea what they heck they're saying. They just hope it sounds good, and that their audience is too confused and afraid of looking dumb that they won't complain.

Pretty much all CRT literature is of that kind. Go and see.

Orwell's advice was not that one should never use a big word, but rather that one should never opt for a polysyllabic one when a diminutive one would suffice (i.e. don't use a big, obscure word when a clear, short one is readily available). That's excellent advice.
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Re: Free Will

Post by jayjacobus »

Belinda wrote: Sun Aug 15, 2021 7:38 pm
jayjacobus wrote: Sun Aug 15, 2021 4:54 pm Determinists are pessimists. They think that fate is against them and there is nothing they can do about it.

The optimist knows that the future is unknowable but he is confident that he can overcome most obstacles.

Sing a simple song of freedom or get away from me.
The alternative to determinism is Free Will.

Some but not all determinists are fatalists.
Fatally wrong. I think.
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Re: Free Will

Post by Belinda »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Aug 15, 2021 8:50 pm
Belinda wrote: Sat Aug 07, 2021 9:46 am The use of academic jargon is that it seals off the byways of interminable wrangling about what people mean.
Orwell thought not.

He said it was a weak-thinker's way of hiding stupid ideas from being exposed by their own stupidity. And indeed, that is often what it has become. He was not wrong. Try reading a lot of literature in the humanities today, and you'll find that it's often laced with words so long and awkward that, for those of us who can read carefully, you'll soon see that even the writers have no idea what they heck they're saying. They just hope it sounds good, and that their audience is too confused and afraid of looking dumb that they won't complain.

Pretty much all CRT literature is of that kind. Go and see.

Orwell's advice was not that one should never use a big word, but rather that one should never opt for a polysyllabic one when a diminutive one would suffice (i.e. don't use a big, obscure word when a clear, short one is readily available). That's excellent advice.
I agree with "one should never use a big word, but rather that one should never opt for a polysyllabic one when a diminutive one would suffice " and try to comply with this including when I express my feelings, let alone when I am writing objectively. I am well aware of this rule of quality language. However it is a fact that many jargons are based on Greek and Latin not on Anglo Saxon and there are well known historical reasons for this. Anglo Saxon also has the advantage of being better for explicit terms of abuse the usage of which can be a handy skill.

It is true there are people who try to mystify , gull, and cheat others by pretending they know more than they do. It is not true that appropriate usage of jargons is a sign of mystification, gulling, or cheating.

If you use jargon to mystify others then you are dishonest, which I am not. I try very hard to be clear in my communications and private thoughts, and I appreciate clarity in others. I also like Anglo Saxon words and I find linguistic prudery annoying.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Free Will

Post by Immanuel Can »

Belinda wrote: Mon Aug 16, 2021 10:59 am ...many jargons are based on Greek and Latin not on Anglo Saxon and there are well known historical reasons for this. Anglo Saxon also has the advantage of being better for explicit terms of abuse the usage of which can be a handy skill.
Orwell was aware of this. And actually, a lot of bloated words are borrowings from French or from some other European language, like German. English is a great acquirer of the words of others.
It is true there are people who try to mystify , gull, and cheat others by pretending they know more than they do. It is not true that appropriate usage of jargons is a sign of mystification, gulling, or cheating.
The key word is "appropriate." There is an appropriate use of a big or technical term, and an inappropriate one. Orwell didn't say "Never use a technical term or concept word": he said, "Never use a long word when a shorter, clearer one is available." Sometimes, such a word is not available without warping the intended concept. And then, it's appropriate.

But in academia, the preference is all for the big over the small, the verbose over the plain, the obscure over the clear, and the ostentatious over the humble. That's a terrible writing habit. If the ideas behind the writing are good, then it ought to be those ideas that ring through with truth and clarity; it should not take polysyllabic obscurantism to render that idea believable, if it's any good in the first place.
If you use jargon to mystify others then you are dishonest...
Well, one might also just be too easily impressed, or one might be trying desperately to appear smart. Lord knows there's enough of that going on in academia. But Orwell also points out that the dishonesty involved extends even to the writer himself/herself: that is, that by being wordy, the writer may fool himself/herself into thinking an idea that is actually stupid or barbaric is reasonable, and thus end up advocating something he/she would never, in his/her right mind, advocate. So it often hurts not just the reader but the writer as well.
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