The Science of Free Will by Samir Varma
Exploring the Facets
In the book, I probe the many facets of this riddle through interdisciplinary explorations. How does quantum indeterminacy relate to human choice? Can subatomic particles exhibit free will? What can traffic jams teach us about inevitability and self-determination? How do cross-cultural concepts of destiny and fate connect to scientific notions
On the other hand, no matter how skilled one might be in intertwining all the facets one perceives to be embedded in any particular human interactions, there is still The Gap, Rumsfeld's problematic conjectures and the Benjamin Button Syndrome.
In other words, the gap between what we think reality is and all that we simply do not -- will not? cannot? -- grasp regarding how the human condition fits into an ontological understanding of existence itself. Or, sure, just shrug that part off as...immaterial? Bringing it all back instead to one or another rendition of God and religion?
Some questions investigated include:- Are we living inside an advanced simulation? What are the philosophical and scientific implications for free will if reality is simulated?
No, really, what if that might actually be true? In fact, there are times when I'm convinced this might be the case. In other words, there are [technologically] some things which don't even seem possible.
Back to this:
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic" Arthur C. Clarke
Really, someone explain to me how it is possible that I can click on submit here and these words "somehow" show up on the screens of everyone now reading them. Including you. The part in particular where all of this unfolds in an entirely wireless world? Or the part where we subscribe to one or another streaming service and all of its content is within reach "in an instant" merely through clicking keys on our computers.
How does chaos theory, with its sensitive dependence on initial conditions, relate to free will versus inevitability?
Right, like chaos theory itself is not in turn but one more inherent manifestation of the only possible reality. What seems chaotic may well reflect that gap between what we think we understand about these things and the extent to which we can demonstrate to others why it is obligatory that they believe the same.
So much of this, however, is all just
still sheer speculation. It's just that sheer speculation is easily enough reconfigured into a "my way or the highway" mentality by the metaphysical objectivists here among us..