Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Thu Aug 03, 2023 7:38 am
iambiguous wrote: ↑Thu Aug 03, 2023 3:37 am
Note to FJ:
How is this not a reasonable attempt on my part to explain both my misgivings about compatibilism and the manner in which the human brain pertaining to free will might be described as "of two minds".
Again, pertaining to abortion or a context of your own.
It may be a reasonable attempt to explain your misgivings about compatibilism. I don't know. What I do know is, contextually, neither me nor iwannaplato is asking you to explain your misgivings about compatibilism.
Still, just out of curiosity -- click -- in regard to Mary and abortion above or in regard to a moral conflagration that is of particular importance to you, encompass your own understanding of compatibilism and any agreements or disagreement you might have regarding it.
Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Thu Aug 03, 2023 7:38 amThe focus is on one thing: your idea that compatibilists need to make an exception for determinism in human brains.
My main focus revolves around how the brain of a compatibilist functions such that one part of it believes that Mary was never able
not to abort her unborn baby, while another part of it still insists that she is morally responsible for doing so. It's the same brain, right? But "somehow" it is able to reconcile what to my brain is not reconcilable at all.
Then that part where, in the dream where Mary has an abortion, her brain is clearly functioning beyond her "will". But: "
in the dream" she does not think that she is dreaming at all. Okay, how is the waking brain "somehow" different when, in fact, Mary does have an abortion?
There are any number of more primitive, primordial brain parts we have little or no control over at all. And here some determinists suggests that, in fact, we have no control over
any parts of it. Only the psychological illusion of control. Okay, but neither scientists nor philosophers are able [to the best of my current knowledge] to actually resolve it once and for all. It's just that the tools at their disposal are very different. Philosophers have definitions and deductions...arguments. Scientists have the experiential and the experimental components built into the "scientific method".
Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Thu Aug 03, 2023 7:38 amYou keep saying compatibilists think that. Compatibilists don't think that. Compatibilists don't think brains are bifurcated into determined and undetermined parts. We're trying to have a conversation with you to ascertain why you think compatibilists think that, and/or help you to finally accept that compatibilists don't think that.
Again, my point is that their point may or may not involve a brain that, biologically, evolved into parts that function autonomically and parts that "somehow" acquired the psychological illusion of control. Or, instead, "somehow" evolved into a brain that really
does have free will. God or No God.
I'm just back to grappling with how
a single brain can reconcile determinism with moral responsibility. My brain isn't able to. Unless, of course, all of our brains are compelled by the laws of matter to think what they do only as they ever could think what they do in the only possible reality.
Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Thu Aug 03, 2023 7:38 amThat's the focus here.
I've made a very clearly stated argument about why I think compatibilists don't think that, and why thinking that is actually directly contradictory to the very definition of compatibilism.
viewtopic.php?p=659356#p659356
Okay -- click -- let's examine it.
Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Thu Aug 03, 2023 7:38 amThe root word of compatibilism is compatible. Of the 13 letters in compatibilism, the first 10 are exactly the same, and in the same order, as compatible. Compatibilism is, at its root, about a compatibility - if it wasn't, it would be a terrible misnomer. Compatibility between what? Free will and determinism, of course (or at least some specific notions of free will).
1] determinism as some construe it: Mary aborted her unborn baby. She aborted her unborn baby because she was never able not to abort it. She was never able not to abort it because her brain, wholly in sync with the laws of matter as with all other matter is, compelled her to.
2] free will as some construe it: either through God or [in a No God universe] through the evolution of matter into biological, conscious, self-conscious human brains, human beings acquired the capacity to think through sets of circumstances and choose among alternative behaviors. Mary introspected on her pregnancy and of her own volition opted to terminate it.
3] compatibilism as some construe it...
Okay, are there any compatibilists following this exchange? You tell me how you think Mary's brain is functioning here in terms of determinism and moral responsibility.
Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Thu Aug 03, 2023 7:38 amIf a compatibilist feels the need to make an exception to determinism, specifically in a human brain, in order for free will to exist to that compatibilist, then that says one thing clearly: that compatibilist does not believe free will and determinism are compatible.
Okay, say some determinists, but whatever the compatibilists think and feel about all of this, it is only because they were never actually free to think and to feel anything else. His or her wants and needs are entirely in sync with the only possible reality: one based on the laws of matter. The human brain being no exception.
Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Thu Aug 03, 2023 7:38 amIf you need to make an exception to determinism in order to allow for free will, then you cannot be a compatibilist, because you do not believe the two things are compatible.
Again, how is this applicable to Mary? Everything that she thinks she needs, just like everything that the libertarians and hardcore determinists think they need, reflects only the inherent, necessary parameters of the only possible world.
Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Thu Aug 03, 2023 7:38 amIf you do believe they are compatible, you don't need to make an exception. Determinism could be the case everywhere, all the time, including in every part of a human brain, and a compatibilist would still believe that free will was there.
But: You would still believe it only because you were never able
not to believe it. So, the compatibilist reconciles an inevitable, wholly determined abortion with moral responsibility but only because every single component of their brain, in sync with the laws of matter, compels them to? Is
that what you are concluding? Not that moral responsibility actually is reconcilable with determinism, but that the compatibilist thinking that it is is?
Though once again, as I have noted any number of times, I am more than willing to concede that I am not following your argument in the most rational manner. But given how I understand determinism "here and now" I'm following it solely in the manner in which my own brain compels me to. So, all of our conclusions here are interchangeable in the only possible reality. If all of our brains compel us to think, feel, say and do things in the only possible sequence, what does it mean to speak of rational and irrational arguments.
Thus, this...
Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Thu Aug 03, 2023 7:38 amThis is why I personally push back against this notion that compatibilists are making these arbitrary exceptions for human brains. It seems to me that that goes against what compatibilism means at its very roots. I've read plenty of literature by compatibilists and I feel confident in saying that, at least for the most part, published works by actual compatibilists conforms to what I've said above: that determinism and free will are fully compatible, and there is no need to make any exceptions for human brains or human behaviour whatsoever.
...may reflect the optimal frame of mind regarding compatibilism. But if you are noting it in a world where you were never able to freely opt to note anything other than that, what does it mean to come here and compare and contrast it with the only frame of mind that I was ever able to note?
It's all "at one" with the only possible reality in the only possible world.