BigMike wrote: ↑Tue Apr 15, 2025 7:13 pm
Pistolero,
You keep trying to wedge your notion of will and freedom into a physical framework while sidestepping the one thing that makes your claim fall apart:
causality. You don’t need to believe in a “free-floating” agent, you say—but then you claim will “participates” in shaping outcomes “intentionally.” That’s just metaphysics with a fresh coat of paint.
You say a worm chooses. That it has intent. You want that to mean agency. But what you’re really describing is feedback and response, not authorship. The worm doesn’t “choose” to move toward food because it weighed moral alternatives. It reacts to stimuli in accordance with its evolved biology. Its “intent” is a function of what its nervous system has been shaped to do, not a declaration of freedom. Same for humans—only more complex.
You ask if a man can resist his impulses. Of course. And we can trace the causes of that restraint: upbringing, values, neurochemistry, prefrontal cortex activity. You want that resistance to mean freedom, but again—it's
explained behavior, not metaphysical authorship. The fact that a person can pause doesn’t mean they’re uncaused—it just means they have the cognitive machinery to process more variables before acting.
Your whole framework depends on smuggling in “intent” as if it somehow steps outside the chain of causation. It doesn’t. You say, “The will finds a focus.” But what determines the focus? You never answer that. You just point to will
as if naming it explains it. That’s the move you keep making—wrapping causally entangled behavior in mystical language and calling it clarity.
You say, “A choice is in reference to an objective.” Fine. Where does the objective come from? What determines which objective is pursued? You call non-choices choices. You say “even choosing not to choose is a choice.” But that’s just rhetoric. All you’re doing is labeling outputs with the language of agency while refusing to define what actually makes them “free.”
And plants willing themselves to move? Seriously? Plants don’t will anything. They grow toward light through mechanistic processes like phototropism. That’s not intention. That’s chemistry. If you think a sunflower “chooses” which way to turn, then you’ve redefined “will” so loosely that even a Roomba counts as an agent.
As for dignity—no, I don’t ground it in illusion. I don’t need the fairy tale that we are authors of ourselves. I find awe in
understanding what shaped us—not in pretending we shape ourselves from nothing. You say “we can choose to improve on what our ancestors gave us.” And I say—yes, through mechanisms of learning, environment, and cause. Not through spontaneous metaphysical authorship.
You keep talking about “hypocrisy.” But I don’t claim people are self-authored. I don’t blame the man who makes a bad choice—I ask
what made that choice happen. That’s not cowardice. That’s just not superstition.
And your final jab—about systemic racism, trauma, or society? Yes, determinism reaches beyond society. Genetics. Environment. Evolutionary history. All of it. That’s the point. If you understood that, you’d stop demanding personal authorship and start asking deeper questions about
why things happen.
Because determinism doesn’t stop justice. It makes justice smarter. It makes morality honest. And it makes will explainable—not sacred.