Because Free Will is a theological doctrine is why I give it capital letters. I would not credit this doctrine with the certainty it demands. As uncertain, the theistic doctrine of Free Will is as incredible as any doctrine that includes that God salted man with the savour of His supernatural Self.RogerSH wrote: ↑Sat Aug 28, 2021 5:04 pmThis looks like a historic, theological version of free will that bears little relation to the subject of all the 20th century papers in Gary Watson's "Free Will" anthology, for example. Obviously, Belinda, as a Humanist I'm not qualified to argue with you about theistic claims! I agree free will isn't the same as "will power" - see my OP on "the difference between formal & psychological free will" - the latter depending, among other things, on will power. But for an action or decision to be "utterly uncaused by any natural causal chain of preceding causes, causal circumstances including human consciousness, or law of science or nature" is to have no grounds for claiming it to be one's own, that I can see. I am the outcome of my genetic and experiential inputs, to be chosen by me is to be chosen by the integration at some moment of all those inputs, it is the experience of that integration that constitutes the experience of being me, deciding. But as I say, that is a Humanist perspective, all I can do is make it as clear as possible: religious conversion is unlikely to happen on a philosophical forum!Belinda wrote: ↑Fri Aug 27, 2021 10:15 amI mostly agree Roger.RogerSH wrote: ↑Thu Aug 26, 2021 10:04 pm
The essential point is the difference between moral responsibility, which applies to conscious beings with an awareness of making choices, and "general" responsibility, for want of a better term, which seems to be a particular cause or chain of causes picked out from a web of joint causes as departing from expectations in some way. It's among other things a response to the book review by Stuart Jeffries in the current PN. The "alarming" implications of determinism (or its denial) that he talks about fade away if the review of a chain of preceding causes is focussed only on points where a conscious choice is made.
But when denying determinism means accepting Free Will I don't agree. Free Will is a universal catalyst that changes all choices, and Free Will does not come in degrees of strength but comes as an all or nothing force. It is mistake to conflate human will power with Free Will. In Free Will , 'Free' means utterly uncaused by any natural causal chain of preceding causes , causal circumstances including human consciousness , or law of science or nature. To the contrary, Free Will miraculously intervenes in nature .
As a Humanist myself I feel free to explore ideas and history of God.
Henry Quirk , is your thinking truly authentic in the Sartrean sense of 'authentic'?
I have found active participation in a philosophical forums like this one and the other one do in fact help me to put my ideas in order, together with my reading. So Henry's idea of freedom makes me think.
As a Humanist, I am not a very pure one because I am devoted to Spinoza not least because the ethical conclusion of his reasoning is politically left.
I
That is existentialists' freedom. It does sound quite like (Heidegger) Dasein or Being-there. in other words you and I and Henry Quirk et al are unique centres of experience. Albeit we are caused to experience what we do, we are each of us centres of experience and centrality makes experiences to be more than amorphous masses.am the outcome of my genetic and experiential inputs, to be chosen by me is to be chosen by the integration at some moment of all those inputs, it is the experience of that integration that constitutes the experience of being me, deciding.