We are more or less in agreement then. Your wording had suggested otherwise, which is why I had chimed in.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Nov 27, 2024 6:31 amI don't know why you're bothering to say it, because I don't know a person on earth who denies that. "Contributes to," yes; "determines," no.Noax wrote:I am saying that the basis contributes to the choice made.
That's actually pretty good, but some clarification is needed about what it means to change a possibility, and also some of the other words.Then let's do that: a "genuine choice" is a choice that actually alters the possible outcome of an incident.Noax wrote:'Genuine choice' has not been defined.
First of all, there are classical and quantum ways to describe things, and it is possible, but dangerous to mix them.
Classical physics is about pool balls and such, and it is deterministic and time reversible. Classical descriptions don't classify 'decisions' one way or another. Quantum physics is about interpretations, some of which are deterministic and some not.
There is typically a list of possible outcomes to a situation, and the way that list changes is that over time, some possibilities get eliminated. That'
s a change. For instance, my son planned a wedding for about a month ago, date being picked about 18 months prior. The possible weather that day could be anywhere from blizzard/hurricane to balmy. As the date got closer, the list of possible weather diminished until the day of when it collapsed into what happened. That's not an example of choice, but it is an example of the only way I see how to interpret the 'alteration of possible outcomes'. By definition, no new possibility can be added to the list, since if it was, it should have been listed as a possibility in the first place. So what do you mean by that?
Side note: I think most definitions of free choice require a presentism assumption, which precludes me since it posits the existence of an additional thing for which there is zero evidence, sort of like positing the proverbial orbiting teapot. That's fine. I will attempt to consider a small section of view, none of which I hold, which includes hard determinism like Bohmian mechanics (with realist state, one history), a soft deterministic one like MWI which lacks any counterfactual state, but has no randomness. Copenhagen is also non-deterministic, but is arguably an epistemological view, not ontological, so it just means lack of predictability, not implying true randomness. Also a non-deterministic view like objective-collapse, something with which I have little familiarity, but seems to come down to 'god rolling dice' that Einstein so vehemently denied. And then there's your view, which I am reluctant to describe for fear of putting wrong words in your mouth, so don't hesitate to correct if I get it wrong.
Choice exists under any view. It is free (or genuine as you now call it) that is in question, and yes, in any deterministic (or even non-presentist) view, your definition is not met. There is one history, and the notion of 'possibility' doesn't come into play at all.Determinism insists there is only ever one possible outcome to everything, and since "choice" requires a minimum of two possibilities, no genuine choice ever exists under Determinism.
So does a non-deterministic view help? I don't see how. Look at the quantum amplifier gadget in the Schrodinger's cat story. We have a device that runs for a minute. If it detects the decay (an uncaused truly random event) of some sample (with a Geiger counter), it amplifies that quantum event into a classical one by dropping a hammer onto a bottle. That''s a quantum amplifier, linking the quantum world quickly to a classical difference. There is no deliberate decision going on in that scenario, but it is an example of a change in possibility. At the start, bottle intact or broken are two possibilities, and after a minute, one of those is eliminated.
But the 'choice' made here is not deliberate. I don't see how any deliberate will can be amplified into a classical difference in outcome. That's where I need your help, if you would. Randomness may be genuine by your definition, but not being deliberate, it isn't choice, and it needs to be both.
I say all this to illustrate why it isn't about determinism at all since the same problems result from non deterministic views.
This seems completely wrong since volition is just a connection between will and action, and that connection very much exists under any view, deterministic or not. Lack of volition only occurs in something like an epiphenomenal view where said connection isn't there. This occurred to my father, who was blessed with the granting of a wish. I was on the phone with him, conversation cut short by a particularly bad coughing spell. We hang up. He gets over it and says "I hope I'm taken soon". Sits down, and has a massive stroke. No motor control to anything from neck down, but lucid and able to communicate with expressions and such. This is an example of what it's like to not have volition;, which is why I bring it up.Causal Determinism has to insist that volition is not a factor
The coughing was necessary and he lacked the volition do it. He lasted less than a day after the phone call. Wish granted, an incredible gift of mercy.
You lean on the term 'volition' a lot, and it constitutes a different definition of 'free'/genuine, one which does not preclude determinism. Stick to the definition you give above. It conveys what you seem to want far better.
It being determined does not mean there is no will. The two terms are not opposites, so saying that it was determined (or predetermined if that means something different) does not counter the claim.The Determinist is going to say, "Prove that." And you won't be able to, because for every evidence you try to give, he'll simply say, "That was predetermined."
Nor prove that it could not have been.But what you can neither prove not prove wrong is whether it could have been a different choice.
I can think of exceptions to this. MWI is fully deterministic and yet still very much supports other outcomes being chosen. You need to qualify your statement even more restrictively to make me agree with it. Point is, careful about asserting what would be said by somebody who holds a different view than your own.The Determinist is going to say, "There never was a possibility of anything but exactly what happened being chosen."
Final note: I continue to not have read a single post in this topic except this chain between you and I. I have zero idea about what is being discussed, but I don't doubt that this is an official sidetrack. Yay notify feature, without which I would not see your replies. I enjoy the interaction because of the glorious civility of it compared to my recent interactions involving someone else. Take care, and happy holiday if it's a holiday where you are. It is here.