Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Tue Dec 12, 2023 1:53 pm
Even as a definition for librarian free will... I mean, can one actually terminate a chain of causality? Do libertarians believe that?
I don't know, but I think one could argue it is entailed. This stuff comes at you: someone screaming, this stuff arises inside you and you experience it: fear, angry, confusion, whatever arises. And yet these causes stop at you. The screaming continues and may be heard by others, but it enters the self and does not affect you in the causal sense of leading to your actions - and that gets gnarly right there as it must cause the experience, it's just that this isn't causal. But anyway I think it's a fair opening move to say this is entailed. As is the idea that they are starting causal chains. I'm not saying libertarians think of it this way, but I don't think this is a bad description of what must be the case.
Like, let's say a row of dominoes are toppling over. Before the entire set of dominoes falls, you put your hand between two and stop the rest from falling. Have you really terminated a chain of causality?
I would say that unlike the next dominoes the cause enters your experience but does not necessarily lead to one further chain, in you. The domino will still be affecting, I would guess, the molecules in your hand and the air, but the causal chain entering your body (so to speak) ends at some point. You are free to go in a number of directions. No amount of information about the locations energy etc. of atoms and molecules could lead to a prediction of your response. Even with a supercomputer the size of a galaxy. Of course as part of their ontology the LFW person might not believe in atoms, etc. in the physicalist sense or at all.
(just to be clear I don't believe in free will. I am not defending my position, but rather trying to match his description with what I think is fair in relation to libertarian free will and what it entails)
Well... no. Physics says every force produces an equal and opposite force, and all energy is preserved in the universe. If you stop a domino toppling, the chain of causality doesn't just STOP - the momentum from that last domino is transferred to your hand, distributed through your body, perhaps converted to heat or something - things keep happening in the chain of causality.
Well, that's more or less what he's saying. It can't work with what we know about causes in determinism, including what we know from science.
I don't think one CAN terminate a chain of causality.
Hence you are not a libertarian free willist.
This isn't meant to be an argument against libertarian free will, just that particular definition. Maybe I'm taking it too literally, idk.
Yes, I think you are agreeing with Bahman here in relation to LFW.
You may think, though, that a LFW is not saying what he said and it is not entailed by their beliefs. Me, I think it's fair, but I'm no expert in LFW. When I have interacted with LFW people I never get a clear understanding of what's going on in their model.