Absolutely, those 'things' are facets of his or her being. And that state with all its momentum and yes emotions, desires, causes the next state. Without the desire and emotion, what would lead one to do anything?henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2024 10:34 amSeems to me: a person desires, envisions, etc. The person causes.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2024 6:24 amWell, that's because whole persons include desires, goals etc., and these are causal.
Subtle difference.
compatibilism
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Iwannaplato
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Re: compatibilism
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Re: compatibilism
Does Joe want pizza, or is Joe possessed by a desire for pizza?
I say the former, you seem to be sayin' the latter
Re: compatibilism
So Joe caused himself to want pizza?henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2024 10:44 amDoes Joe want pizza, or is Joe possessed by a desire for pizza?
I say the former, you seem to be sayin' the latter
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Re: compatibilism
I would say that, although he might consciously choose to eat pizza, he does not consciously choose to want pizza, and it is the wanting that causes the conscious decision. I'm not implying any further conclusion from that, but just trying to describe the situation.henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2024 11:17 amHis hunger for pizza is his appetite and his preference: he chooses to give way or to abstain. So, in a sense, he does cause himself to want pizza. His desire/preference is a function of him, not an imp that tempts him.
Re: compatibilism
Joe is getting food because he is hungry. If he wasn't hungry then he would not be getting food.
Joe is getting pizza because of ... availability? convenience? a learned preference? If there were no pizza places in the area, then he would not get it. If he came from another culture, then he would likely want something else.
IOW, his desire for pizza doesn't come from nowhere.
Joe is getting pizza because of ... availability? convenience? a learned preference? If there were no pizza places in the area, then he would not get it. If he came from another culture, then he would likely want something else.
IOW, his desire for pizza doesn't come from nowhere.
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Re: compatibilism
*it's a preference: his preference, that he can choose to abide by or reject.Harbal wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2024 11:28 amI would say that, although he might consciously choose to eat pizza, *he does not consciously choose to want pizza, and **it is the wanting that causes the conscious decision. I'm not implying any further conclusion from that, but just trying to describe the situation.
**His hunger and preference are functions of hm. Neither causes: he causes.
Last edited by henry quirk on Thu Aug 29, 2024 1:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: compatibilism
In the context of "free will", do you think there is no distinction to be made between conscious intention, and bodily functions that are not under conscious control?henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2024 12:58 pm*it's a preference: his preference, that he can choose to abide by or reject.Harbal wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2024 11:28 amI would say that, although he might consciously choose to eat pizza, *he does not consciously choose to want pizza, and **it is the wanting that causes the conscious decision. I'm not implying any further conclusion from that, but just trying to describe the situation.
**His hunger and preference are functions of hm. Neither causes: he causes.
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Re: compatibilism
Stan has a full bladder and feels the urge to relief himself. He has no conscious control over the status of his bladder or the urge. He does, however, decide on when to relieve himself. He might resist that urge for a long time. He might deny that urge right up to the point his muscles fail and he wets himself. There's obviously a distinction. Just as obviously: Stan controls, at the very least, his response to his bodily functions. He chooses, not the bladder. He causes, not the bladder.
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Re: compatibilism
His desire to hold it in, is also caused.
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Re: compatibilism
henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2024 1:32 pmStan has a full bladder and feels the urge to relief himself. He has no conscious control over the status of his bladder or the urge. He does, however, decide on when to relieve himself.
Ok, I've been in that situation, obviously. Why do I hold back the urge to pee? Because I don't want to pee in my pants or in public where I am. One desire trumps another desire.
You're oddly moving into Bahman territory where you view us as monads so if different parts of us have different desires, this shows we have free will. But no, it just shows that we are complicated and these different parts and desires have a struggle.
Stan is his bodily urges and his social urges and his values urges. These are not always aligned. So, there can be a struggle.He might resist that urge for a long time. He might deny that urge right up to the point his muscles fail and he wets himself. There's obviously a distinction. Just as obviously: Stan controls, at the very least, his response to his bodily functions. He chooses, not the bladder. He causes, not the bladder.
Some part will win. The I don't want to pee in my pants or in public part wins if it finds a toilet, say, before the bodily urge wins. Urges strugging with urges.
Both causal, but to different degrees in different ways. Some urges and desires are affected by values or even created by them, and by social concerns, given we are (most of us) social mammals. We can even hate ourselves and just stifle urges out of spit, that's how split our parts can be (seem).
Re: compatibilism
On the question of free will, it seems to me that there are so many things to take into account, some of which we don't really understand, and there are so many differing definitions and interpretations of the terms, that any meaningful conclusion is probably not possible. I only mean that in the context of a philosophical discussion, and I do realise that it's perfectly possible to satisfy oneself on the matter.henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2024 1:32 pmStan has a full bladder and feels the urge to relief himself. He has no conscious control over the status of his bladder or the urge. He does, however, decide on when to relieve himself. He might resist that urge for a long time. He might deny that urge right up to the point his muscles fail and he wets himself. There's obviously a distinction. Just as obviously: Stan controls, at the very least, his response to his bodily functions. He chooses, not the bladder. He causes, not the bladder.
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Re: compatibilism
So, his choice is determined by the combination of the body urge to pee and the social or other desires to not pee. The struggle is caused by those causes. And sooner or later one wins. There other other situations where contrasting urges cause stagnation. The person can't manage to reconcile the urges.
It doesn't matter if you cause it or the external causes it as far as determinism. No one is arguing that our desires and urges and values that form desires aren't causal. All the causes, internal and external lead to the next moments event/decision whatever.
Last edited by Iwannaplato on Thu Aug 29, 2024 2:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.