Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 9:38 amWhat do you point to that led to the choice?
A lot of the influence is unknown, and perhaps unknowable. Here is the more important distinction. A choice, like a cause, is
ongoing. It is not a clear, distinct, absolute "moment in time". A single "choice" may represent...10 seconds, or 10 minutes, or 10 years. Same with Causality. The main problem is that the human mind looks for certainty and absolution. It wants to define and confine choice and causality down to a clear unit. But this is not true. And it is the fault of Determinism/Determinists.
Because the root 'causes' cannot be pinned down.
It's worse with human motivations. Because if you corner a person about his or her Choice, then there is always plausible deniability compared to some impossible, utopian standard. "
Ohhh...I didn't mean THAT to happen!" And because nothing is ever perfect, no Will ever complete, human institutions give people in general "the benefit of the doubt". This applies to practical cases like car accidents, where one party blames the other. And the 'cause', like the 'choice', remains uncertain. Liability requires that both parties simply move on, and Insurance to often times pay out both sides.
Insurance represents a human intervention to the impracticality of choice, cause, and consequence.
Dontaskme wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 9:30 am3) Further you have said, or implied that animals do not have free will - see your OP. Why not? They make choices, and some animals have far greater will than others. And many animals have free time, many of the social mammals. They do not have to spend all their time defending themselves or finding food. They play, socialize, groom, have sex for fun, masturbate. And they do different things on different days. Thus, they make choices, and some have greater wills. How do you know they don't have free will?
Free-Will up to a point, up to a standard, a standard measurement or unit. What does a human consider "free-will"? See my interaction with Harbal just ahead. Levitation. Must humans levitate, in order to "prove free-will once and for all"?
A hummingbird laughs at the notion. They can levitate just fine, already.
"
But that's not what I meant!" replies the Determinist.
And I agree, humans have unique types of free-will, unique types of abilities, that other mammals, and other animals, simply do not have.
(Most of this is in intelligence, technology, rationalization, logic, reasoning, and imagination)