RCSaunders wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:14 pm
How can I? According to your view, I have no choice in the matter.
No, according to me, if my own understanding of determinism is correct then you have no autonomous choice in the matter.
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:14 pm If you are going to call just anything that happens a, "choice," and must make a distinction between an event and a volitional choice, the distinction is not, "autonomy," but, "consciousness." A volitional choice is one where all the possible options have been consciously identified and evaluated relative to some objective and selected to execute. The rational process of evaluation and selection may not be explicit (especially if it is commonly performed one) but it is always implied.
Okay, but what does
this entirely "intellectual contraption" mean "for all practical proposes?"
Back again to Mary "choosing" an abortion, such that the "choice" is only the psychological illusion of choosing freely. Or Mary
choosing an abortion such that matter evolving into the human brain "somehow" created autonomy.
Or the compatibilist argument that, yes, Mary was never able not to abort her fetus, but she is still morally responsible for it.
Or, rather, the extent to which I understand compatibilism here.
Anyway, you will either reframe your argument by intertwining it in a "situation" we are all likely to be familiar with or you won't.
Or, is that sort of thing all "pointless" to you?
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:14 pm I have no idea what anyone else's conscious experience is, nor does it possibly matter. If you want to know what or how someone else thinks you can ask them, but the proper answer is, "it's none of your business." Because it isn't.
Here though the focus is not on what others think but on whether they were able to not think it. But: assuming free will, what others do think can have profound implications in regard to our interactions with them. What if, in the is/ought world, it cannot be determined by philosophers how rational and virtuous men and women ought to think?
iambiguous wrote: ↑Fri Feb 18, 2022 6:34 am
But what if it's not correct? In that case, it's not fish that interests me in regard to determinism and free will but the choices that our own species make. In particular on this thread in regard to how compatibilists reconcile determinism with moral responsibility.
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:14 pm There is no guarantee any choice will be a correct one no matter how well reasoned. There is a guarantee and unreasoned choice (one based on whim, or desire, or feeling, or irrational fear, for example) will be a wrong one.
On the contrary, given our interactions in the either/or world, there are countless situations in which there is only the right answer. Whereas in the is/ought world, how do we go about establishing the right answer? Philosophically or otherwise. The question here though revolves around autonomy. From my frame of mind "here and now" there can be no wrong answers if all answers are wholly as in sync with the laws of matter.
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:14 pm One is only responsible for the life they have the authority for making choices for--their own life. It is the fact that all own does they must consciously choose to do the makes them responsible for their actions. It is the reason we do not hold the animals or machines responsible for what they do, because they do not consciously choose their behavior.
Unless, of course, human animals are no less compelled by the laws of matter to act only as they must. That's the part we are still groping to understand more fully. Here philosophically, and, for the neuroscientists, experientially.
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:14 pm No one is responsible to or for anyone else or anyone else's behavior.
And yet, even assuming volition on our part, there are any number of contexts in which we might be indoctrinated by others to behave as we do. As children in particular. Or we might be using drugs or have a mental condition/affliction. Think Leonard killing Teddy in Memento.
Again, in order to sustain an exchange such as this, yes, I can only assume that I do have some measure of free will. And, of course, that may well be the case. But these exchanges are always surreal because until we grasp definitively how brain matter clearly came to be different from all other matter, we take our own philosophical leaps to conflicting sets of assumptions in exchanges like this.
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:14 pm There is absolutely nothing about the physical nature of the brain that different from any other physical material. Conscious is not some kind of thing or stufff or material. Consciousness is an attribute (a quality, property, or characteristic). It's like a, "state." There are physical states like liquid, solid, and gas and some material things can have, at any time, any of those states. But those states are not things, not different kinds of matter. Consciousness is that state of a living organism that enables it to be aware (through perception) of its physical environment and (via interoception) its own physical nature . It is, as I said, an attribute, like size, or charge, or shape, or color but is just not a physical attribute such as those. Like a state it is "on" (when one is awake) and "off" (when one is asleep, anesthetized, or dead). But it is not a thing or substance and has no existence at all except as a property of some living organisms.
As I noted, I have no clear understanding of how abstract assumptions like this play themselves out given actual human interactions. These "attributes" "states" "things" "stuff" "material"...are they manifestations of the only possible reality? Or manifestations of the singular autonomous reality that we perceive as individuals in any particular set of circumstances? A reality we freely opted to embrace.
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:14 pmNot sure what your point was in this last paragraph but there is nothing teleological about any aspect of physical or ontological existence. All of teleology begins and ends with human minds because nothing in the universe matters except to human rational consciousness. If there were no human beings in the universe, nothing would matter and there would be no values of any kind.
The way you speak of these things as though you, "an infinitesimally tiny and insignificant speck of existence in the vastness of all there is", could possibly know for a fact that they are true!!!
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 11:14 pmRelative to an atom, a human being is as big as the entire universe. Physical size has nothing to do with consciousness nor the capacity for knowledge. Why would it?
Yes, but how does that make my point go away?