iambiguous wrote: ↑Wed Dec 04, 2024 8:41 pm
These mysterious "internal components" of the mind that "somehow" given the evolution of biological life on Earth acquired autonomy from the brain?
There are people who think that free will arises in some creatures - though even amongst those who do not mean actions and decisions that are not caused by prior causes. But generally, compatibilists do not think there are 'internal components' have led to some kind of exception from determinism. Some fringe people who call themselves compatibilists may, though I haven't encountered one. So, in the main, this is tilting at windmills.
By appealing to claims about an agent’s internal states, compatibilists argue that people can be held responsible when they are acting according to certain sorts of dispositions, e.g., their own beliefs and desires. And others have pointed out that we still have strong intuitions of responsibility even about cases that are explicitly deterministic.
Again, this [to me] mysterious gap between the external variables in our lives and the internal components of the mind.
And again, to be clear, they are NOT saying that the beliefs and desires are free and exceptions from determinism, or that the acts are. They are holding the person responsible because this is a person who wanted to rape, for example. The argument is not based on thinking that the rapist freely chose to rape as an exception to determinism. It is that he, for example, is aligned with raping. That's who he is. The guy with a bomb wrapped around his chest who is ordered to rob a bank or be blown up is not aligned with the crime, he's trying to survive. In neither situation does the compatibilist think someone is choose outside the causal chains of hard determinism.
Sure there may well be a crucial disctinction between "external" and "internal" components here. But how is that determined beyond taking it up into the philosophical clouds and debating it all theoretically?
No, it's very practical. In a deterministic universe, would you want your daughter to live next to the guy who was forced at gunpoint to rape someone, or the guy who likes to rape and enjoyed, chose his targets with care?
We make practical decisions like this all the time, whether we believe in libertarian free will or some form of deteminism like compatibilism. We hold people responsible depending on what causes inevitably led to the act. Not because some causes allowed for free will, but because of what they say about the person and what they are likely to do. And also perhaps because of what they are.
And we slap mosquitoes, most non-Buddhists, to death, even though few people think mosquitoes have free will.
And then will someone explain how libertarian free will leads to moral responsibility, perhaps you Iambiguous?
Someone rapes and it was not caused by their desires, external factors, their attitudes or wishes. What that means is that it just happened. It was NOT caused by his desires. How can you hold someone responsible?
It is implicit over and over that if we do have free will then it makes sense to consider us morally responsible. But with determinism you can't imagine how.
Well, please explain how uncaused acts can be considered moral acts?