phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 06, 2023 9:47 pm
And around and around we go. Cue Schopenhauer: Mary wants to have an abortion but Mary can't want what she wants. Instead, she wants only what her brain compels her to want.
Then the brain in dreamland.
In a dream, Mary has an abortion. And, while in the dream, it's like she wasn't dreaming at all. She "experiences" having the abortion just as though it were the wide awake world. In fact, she wakes up in the morning marveling at how her brain itself concocted this "reality"! Given that she wasn't even pregnant!!
Her brain is the source of her wants. Obviously she can't want something else.
Yep, that's how many, many determinists will put it alright.
On the other hand, if, say, you believe in God and God installed free will in your soul the very moment you were conceived, then you'd have the capacity to freely listen to your friend's argument and decide that no, now you don't want to abort the baby/clump of cells in your womb.
Unless, perhaps, this God of yours is omniscient? Then you'd have to figure how to reconcile free will with an all-knowing God. Call it a miracle?
And, in a free will world, Mary wants to have an abortion and Jane is toast. But a friend of hers, of her own volition, talks her out of it and Jane is now among us.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 06, 2023 9:47 pmYou keep repeating this as if Mary can't be talked out of her abortion in a determined world. That's simply not true.
That's because given the manner in which I understand determinism, if Mary is talked out of it in a wholly determined universe where the human brain is itself, like all other matter, in thrall to the laws of matter, her friend was no less compelled to talk her out of it. The unborn baby joins the rest of us out of the womb. But in a free will world where the friend was able of her own volition to think up the argument, and the argument failed to convince Mary, the baby is aborted.
Though again, sure, I'm just not understanding your point correctly and in fact your point is entirely reasonable. But here we are.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 06, 2023 9:47 pmYou seem to think that no matter what is said to determined Mary, she will ignore them and still have an abortion. That's not how determinism works. Determined Mary will respond in some way and one possible response is changing her mind about the abortion.
No, I think that whatever is said to Mary, if it is said to her because there was no possibility of it not being said to her then that is in sync with a world where there was never the possibility of her not having the abortion.
But if "somehow" [God or No God] the human brain did acquire the capacity to think through things like abortion, the unborn may be shredded or it may be delivierd.
But this is the part I root existentially in dasein. And not in God or ideology or deontology or biological imperatives.
Again, under determinism as some understand it, she does what she wants but she could not want what she wanted. Her brain was wholly in command there.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 06, 2023 9:47 pmYou repeat this again.
Yeah, and that's because "here and now" -- click -- it still makes sense to me.
phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Aug 06, 2023 9:47 pmIn a free-will world Mary does not get to chose her wants, either. Her wants are the product of her experiences. She doesn't have some set of wants which is independent of the state of her brain.
Compelled to or not, we think about this differently. In a free will world as I understand it, Mary can of her own volition come into a forum like this and explore all of the different -- and ofttimes conflicting -- assessments of human autonomy. Like me, she might end up changing her mind about it. In a determined world as I understand it, however, from the cradle to the grave everything that we think, feel say or do in regard to this "going-back-to-the-pre-Socratics" philosophical quandary unfolds in the only possible reality.
From my frame of mind there is an enormous difference between having and not having free will. Between wanting the things we do becasue we opted to want them and our brains compelling us want only what we are ever able to want.
You say that, "free-willers have no more control over their wants than do determinists", and this makes sense to you.
But it is nothing short of preposterous from my frame of mind. Well, if I do have the capacity to come to that conclusion of my own free will.