Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Sat Dec 09, 2023 4:51 pm
bahman wrote: ↑Sat Dec 09, 2023 4:37 pm
Well, I had a quick look at the article. It would take me a long time to discuss the article here arguing with what I agree or disagree. I have an issue with the definition of free will that you cited, namely the classical definition: "For the classical compatibilist, then, free will is an ability to do what one wants." This to me is the definition of will rather than free will.
It's okay if you don't like the compatiblist definition of free will. Plenty of people don't. But then the position is not so much "compatibilism is impossible" as it is "I don't like compatibilist semantics".
Which is fine. There's no law saying you have to like it. Rejecting compatibilism for semantic reasons is a completely normal and common thing many thinkers do. But there's not really much to talk about after that - you use one definition of "free will", they use another, so what else is there to say?
Actually, the adjective "free" in "free will" is usually appended to distinguish the concept from "constrained will," or Determinism, not to suggest that will ever operates with absolutely no conditions or circumstances involved.
The idea is to emphasize that volition is
a genuine causal agency, and that people's choices can make a difference in what happens; whereas, under Determinism, will is said to be just an "epiphenomenon," or "seeming," with the deep truth remaining that everything, including the appearance of volition, is actually predetermined by material causes of some kind.
The problem for both sides is what to do with two clear facts: 1) that all choices happen within circumstances, or can be influenced by things, but 2) that our powers of making choices seem to us to be so genuine that we all act, all the time, as if Determinism is not the case. And this is the Gordian Knot that Compatibilism tries to cut: it tries to say "Determinism is true, but since we don't know it's true, and since we act like it's not, the two things are "compatible."
But they're not.
Either human will makes A difference,
or human will makes NO difference. If it makes any difference at all, then the "free will" position is true; if it makes none at all, then Determinism is true.
So Compatibilism has no real status or value as an explanation.