Free will & Moral responsibility
AQA Ethics
Compatibilism – also called soft determinism
This is the view that free will and determinism are compatible (can both be true). Hume distinguishes between internal causes (causes that are internal to a person – their beliefs, desires, motivations, intentions) and external causes (causes that are external to a person – someone forcing them to do something). Hume noticed that we only hold people responsible for actions that result from our internal causes. So Hume defined free will as being determined by your internal causes not external causes. Even though our internal causes are just as determined as our external causes, Hume thinks this definition of free will nonetheless gives us the conception of moral responsibility we want.
Back to being totally stumped again. If our "internal causes are just as determined as our external cause" then how are they not in turn responsible for how Hume defined free will?
The "
conception of moral responsibility"? Same thing. Some philosophers may want it to include "free will" but if what they want is only what they could never not want...what then?
So, of course...
This is not the definition of free will people want. They want to actually be the uncaused cause of their actions, and to have the ability to have done otherwise. Kant called Hume’s compatibilism ‘wretched subterfuge’ which suggests humans are just like ‘clockwork’.
Again, the part where I get stuck. The part where others focus in on those utterly crucial definitions. If only others would define compatibilism as they do, everything would be resolved. In other words, defining compatibilism despite the inherent gap embedded in this:
All of this going back to how the matter we call the human brain was "somehow" able to acquire autonomy when non-living matter "somehow" became living matter "somehow" became conscious matter "somehow" became self-conscious matter.
Brain scientists don't grasp this profound mystery yet, let alone philosophers encompassing it all in their worlds of words.
Besides, how does one pin down whether or not, in defining it, one was able
to freely opt to define it otherwise?
Here, see what I mean...
Compatibilists argue that free will does not exist, however, yet they claim to have found a definition of free will that allows for ethics.
Argue, argue, argue. Claim, claim, claim.
The distinction between internal and external causes is incoherent. Don’t internal causes ultimately trace back, if we go far enough, to before we were born, and therefore to external causes?
How about this: all the way back to how the human condition itself fits into the definitive understanding of and explanation for the existence of existence itself.
I mean, if it's not God.