Page 57 of 70

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 12:20 pm
by Flannel Jesus
henry quirk wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:12 pm
Flannel Jesus wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:09 pm
henry quirk wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:04 pm

❓

The objections to libertarian free will can be summed up as it's not possible in a cause & effect universe. Am I mistaken? Is this not your objection?
No
Okay, I'm wrong, then. What is your objection to libertarian free will?
That in order for your will to be free to cause anything requires we live in a cause and effect universe. There's no type of indeterminism that could possibly add to our freedom. Postulating non causal stuff doesn't make our will more free

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 12:29 pm
by henry quirk
Flannel Jesus wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:20 pm
henry quirk wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:12 pm
Flannel Jesus wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:09 pm
No
Okay, I'm wrong, then. What is your objection to libertarian free will?
That in order for your will to be free to cause anything requires we live in a cause and effect universe. There's no type of indeterminism that could possibly add to our freedom. Postulating non causal stuff doesn't make our will more free
To be free willed we have to be determined?

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 12:32 pm
by Wizard22
Sadly, he doesn't seem to realize his contradiction...

Think on it long and hard FJ...

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 12:35 pm
by Flannel Jesus
henry quirk wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:29 pm
Flannel Jesus wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:20 pm
henry quirk wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:12 pm

Okay, I'm wrong, then. What is your objection to libertarian free will?
That in order for your will to be free to cause anything requires we live in a cause and effect universe. There's no type of indeterminism that could possibly add to our freedom. Postulating non causal stuff doesn't make our will more free
To be free willed we have to be determined?
Yes

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 12:36 pm
by Flannel Jesus
Wizard22 wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:32 pm Sadly, he doesn't seem to realize his contradiction...

Think on it long and hard FJ...
I'm not taking any advice from you until you can figure out why that post wasn't trying to discredit anything. If you can't read, I'm not taking advice from you

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 12:39 pm
by henry quirk
Flannel Jesus wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:35 pm
henry quirk wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:29 pm
Flannel Jesus wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:20 pm
That in order for your will to be free to cause anything requires we live in a cause and effect universe. There's no type of indeterminism that could possibly add to our freedom. Postulating non causal stuff doesn't make our will more free
To be free willed we have to be determined?
Yes
That doesn't make sense to me. Can you elaborate?

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 12:43 pm
by Flannel Jesus
henry quirk wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:39 pm
Flannel Jesus wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:35 pm
henry quirk wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 12:29 pm

To be free willed we have to be determined?
Yes
That doesn't make sense to me. Can you elaborate?
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/NEeW7eS ... rt-physics

I don't think that's a long article, and it's not wrapped in jargon imo

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 1:08 pm
by henry quirk
The machine I'm usin' won't open the link (it's an old machine).

Can you summarize it?

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 1:13 pm
by Wizard22
“Compatibilism” is the philosophical position that “free will” can be intuitively and satisfyingly defined in such a way as to be compatible with deterministic physics. “Incompatibilism” is the position that free will and determinism are incompatible.

My position might perhaps be called “Requiredism.” When agency, choice, control, and moral responsibility are cashed out in a sensible way, they require determinism—at least some patches of determinism within the universe. If you choose, and plan, and act, and bring some future into being, in accordance with your desire, then all this requires a lawful sort of reality; you cannot do it amid utter chaos. There must be order over at least those parts of reality that are being controlled by you. You are within physics, and so you/physics have determined the future. If it were not determined by physics, it could not be determined by you.
So...more free-will as long as it's Determined.

It's quite the logical crutch here.

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 1:15 pm
by Wizard22
"you cannot do it amid utter chaos"

And here we have a link between Determinists. Why not? Why presume that everything must be 'Ordered' and what does it mean to be 'Ordered' exactly? Except...bound to subjective human expectations? That people's limits, are what they expect physics and reality to be? Meanwhile, in real reality, these expectations are broken daily.

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 1:20 pm
by henry quirk
Wizard22 wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 1:13 pm
“Compatibilism” is the philosophical position that “free will” can be intuitively and satisfyingly defined in such a way as to be compatible with deterministic physics. “Incompatibilism” is the position that free will and determinism are incompatible.

My position might perhaps be called “Requiredism.” When agency, choice, control, and moral responsibility are cashed out in a sensible way, they require determinism—at least some patches of determinism within the universe. If you choose, and plan, and act, and bring some future into being, in accordance with your desire, then all this requires a lawful sort of reality; you cannot do it amid utter chaos. There must be order over at least those parts of reality that are being controlled by you. You are within physics, and so you/physics have determined the future. If it were not determined by physics, it could not be determined by you.
So...more free-will as long as it's Determined.

It's quite the logical crutch here.
Does the quoted piece come from FJ's link?

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 1:28 pm
by Flannel Jesus
henry quirk wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 1:08 pm The machine I'm usin' won't open the link (it's an old machine).

Can you summarize it?
from https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/NEeW7eS ... rt-physics:

Three months ago—jeebers, has it really been that long?—I posed the following homework assignment: Do a stack trace of the human cognitive algorithms that produce debates about “free will.” Note that this task is strongly distinguished from arguing that free will does or does not exist.

Now, as expected, people are asking, “If the future is determined, how can our choices control it?” The wise reader can guess that it all adds up to normality; but this leaves the question of how.

People hear: “The universe runs like clockwork; physics is deterministic; the future is fixed.” And their minds form a causal network that looks like this:
Untitled-1.png

Here we see the causes “Me” and “Physics,” competing to determine the state of the “Future” effect. If the “Future” is fully determined by “Physics,” then obviously there is no room for it to be affected by “Me.”

This causal network is not an explicit philosophical belief. It’s implicit— a background representation of the brain, controlling which philosophical arguments seem “reasonable.” It just seems like the way things are.

Every now and then, another neuroscience press release appears, claiming that, because researchers used an fMRI to spot the brain doing something-or-other during a decision process, it’s not you who chooses, it’s your brain.

Likewise that old chestnut, “Reductionism undermines rationality itself. Because then, every time you said something, it wouldn’t be the result of reasoning about the evidence—it would be merely quarks bopping around.”

Of course the actual diagram should be:
Untitled-2.png
Or better yet:
Untitled-3.png
Why is this not obvious? Because there are many levels of organization that separate our models of our thoughts—our emotions, our beliefs, our agonizing indecisions, and our final choices—from our models of electrons and quarks.

We can intuitively visualize that a hand is made of fingers (and thumb and palm). To ask whether it’s really our hand that picks something up, or merely our fingers, thumb, and palm, is transparently a wrong question.

But the gap between physics and cognition cannot be crossed by direct visualization. No one can visualize atoms making up a person, the way they can see fingers making up a hand.

And so it requires constant vigilance to maintain your perception of yourself as an entity within physics.

This vigilance is one of the great keys to philosophy, like the Mind Projection Fallacy. You will recall that it is this point which I nominated as having tripped up the quantum physicists who failed to imagine macroscopic decoherence; they did not think to apply the laws to themselves.

Beliefs, desires, emotions, morals, goals, imaginations, anticipations, sensory perceptions, fleeting wishes, ideals, temptations… You might call this the “surface layer” of the mind, the parts-of-self that people can see even without science. If I say, “It is not you who determines the future, it is your desires, plans, and actions that determine the future,” you can readily see the part-whole relations. It is immediately visible, like fingers making up a hand. There are other part-whole relations all the way down to physics, but they are not immediately visible.

“Compatibilism” is the philosophical position that “free will” can be intuitively and satisfyingly defined in such a way as to be compatible with deterministic physics. “Incompatibilism” is the position that free will and determinism are incompatible.

My position might perhaps be called “Requiredism.” When agency, choice, control, and moral responsibility are cashed out in a sensible way, they require determinism—at least some patches of determinism within the universe. If you choose, and plan, and act, and bring some future into being, in accordance with your desire, then all this requires a lawful sort of reality; you cannot do it amid utter chaos. There must be order over at least those parts of reality that are being controlled by you. You are within physics, and so you/physics have determined the future. If it were not determined by physics, it could not be determined by you.

Or perhaps I should say, “If the future were not determined by reality, it could not be determined by you,” or “If the future were not determined by something, it could not be determined by you.” You don’t need neuroscience or physics to push naive definitions of free will into incoherence. If the mind were not embodied in the brain, it would be embodied in something else; there would be some real thing that was a mind. If the future were not determined by physics, it would be determined by something, some law, some order, some grand reality that included you within it.

But if the laws of physics control us, then how can we be said to control ourselves?

Turn it around: If the laws of physics did not control us, how could we possibly control ourselves?

How could thoughts judge other thoughts, how could emotions conflict with each other, how could one course of action appear best, how could we pass from uncertainty to certainty about our own plans, in the midst of utter chaos?

If we were not in reality, where could we be?

The future is determined by physics. What kind of physics? The kind of physics that includes the actions of human beings.

People’s choices are determined by physics. What kind of physics? The kind of physics that includes weighing decisions, considering possible outcomes, judging them, being tempted, following morals, rationalizing transgressions, trying to do better…

There is no point where a quark swoops in from Pluto and overrides all this.

The thoughts of your decision process are all real, they are all something. But a thought is too big and complicated to be an atom. So thoughts are made of smaller things, and our name for the stuff that stuff is made of is “physics.”

Physics underlies our decisions and includes our decisions. It does not explain them away.

Remember, physics adds up to normality; it’s your cognitive algorithms that generate confusion

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 4:39 pm
by Iwannaplato
Flannel Jesus wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 1:28 pm My position might perhaps be called “Requiredism.” When agency, choice, control, and moral responsibility are cashed out in a sensible way, they require determinism—at least some patches of determinism within the universe. If you choose, and plan, and act, and bring some future into being, in accordance with your desire, then all this requires a lawful sort of reality; you cannot do it amid utter chaos. There must be order over at least those parts of reality that are being controlled by you. You are within physics, and so you/physics have determined the future. If it were not determined by physics, it could not be determined by you.
I thought your post was very clearly laid out. I wanted to zoom in on what I think is a key point. If it is desires that lead to actions, what is it that leads to desires? I am not sure we even need physics. The conundrum is not, hey your whole body is made up of atoms, so...., etc. But more regardless of how we view humans and their choices we are dealing with causal chains, or we aren't. Desires would come from what has happened and our understanding of things based on experiences and intuition and what we want. There's always something pushing forward in time towards and away from things or making choices. And this pushing forward, call it desires, it seems like it is part of a causal chain going back to temperment and inclinations affected by experiences. The desire related to the next moment's choice comes before that choice and action. It is causally related to it. And external reality resists or allows our desires and choices. What causes the choice in any given moment to be able to go in more than one direction? And the difference between choosing to call up a friend or just turn on Netflix....?The free will person could have done either (and some other stuff). But what caused them in that moment to make the choice they did? And why, if we ran that moment a hundred times would it come out differently. They preferred to watch Netflix, say, they'd had a busy highly social work day. Why wouldn't that motivation trump the other choice every single time. Note: not that every single time they choose to be alone, but in that particular moment, given their temperment, their desire, their day, the friendship itself (perhaps he's a big talker) and so on. If it is not one's desire causing the choice what is it? And why would this be a good thing if one could go against what one wants most in that moment of choosing?

I don't rule out that there is some way this is true and also not random. I just don't know what it is.

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 5:15 pm
by Flannel Jesus
Iwannaplato wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 4:39 pm
Flannel Jesus wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 1:28 pm My position might perhaps be called “Requiredism.” When agency, choice, control, and moral responsibility are cashed out in a sensible way, they require determinism—at least some patches of determinism within the universe. If you choose, and plan, and act, and bring some future into being, in accordance with your desire, then all this requires a lawful sort of reality; you cannot do it amid utter chaos. There must be order over at least those parts of reality that are being controlled by you. You are within physics, and so you/physics have determined the future. If it were not determined by physics, it could not be determined by you.
I thought your post was very clearly laid out. I wanted to zoom in on what I think is a key point. If it is desires that lead to actions, what is it that leads to desires? I am not sure we even need physics. The conundrum is not, hey your whole body is made up of atoms, so...., etc. But more regardless of how we view humans and their choices we are dealing with causal chains, or we aren't.
Just want to say first of all that those aren't my words, they are just words that I found and that make a lot of sense to me.

But you're right, that "physics" per se isn't necessarily the center of this train of logic - it doesn't have to be, even if it does happen to be in this particular case. And that I believe is recognized within the article here:
If it were not determined by physics, it could not be determined by you.

Or perhaps I should say, “If the future were not determined by reality, it could not be determined by you,” or “If the future were not determined by something, it could not be determined by you.” You don’t need neuroscience or physics to push naive definitions of free will into incoherence. If the mind were not embodied in the brain, it would be embodied in something else; there would be some real thing that was a mind. If the future were not determined by physics, it would be determined by something, some law, some order, some grand reality that included you within it.
He takes the wording away from physics and into just the general concept of "whatever thing it is that our mind happens to be, whether that's embodied by physics or something else entirely."

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/NEeW7eS ... rt-physics

Re: Does the "Free Will" point of view affect morals and character?

Posted: Wed May 10, 2023 5:34 pm
by henry quirk
Flannel Jesus wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 1:28 pm
I've posted the following several times, in-forum. This seems a good time to post it again.

Interviewing the dead Albert Einstein about free will

by Jon Rappoport

It was a strange journey into the astral realm to find Albert Einstein.

I slipped through gated communities heavily guarded by troops protecting dead Presidents. I skirted alleys where wannabe demons claiming they were Satan’s reps were selling potions made from powdered skulls of English kings. I ran through mannequin mansions where trainings for future shoppers were in progress. Apparently, some souls come to Earth to be born as aggressive entitled consumers. Who knew?

Finally, in a little valley, I spotted a cabin, and there on the porch, sitting in a rocker, smoking a pipe and reading The Bourne Ultimatum, was Dr. Einstein.

He was wearing an old sports jacket with leather patches on the elbows, jeans, and furry slippers.

I wanted to talk with the great man because I’d read a 1929 Saturday Evening Post interview with him. He’d said:

“I am a determinist. As such, I do not believe in free will…Practically, I am, nevertheless, compelled to act as if freedom of the will existed. If I wish to live in a civilized community, I must act as if man is a responsible being.”

Dr, Einstein went inside and brought out two bottles of cold beer and we began our conversation:

Q: Sir, would you say that the underlying nature of physical reality is atomic?

A: If you’re asking me whether atoms and smaller particles exist everywhere in the universe, then of course, yes.

Q: And are you satisfied that, wherever they are found, they are the same? They exhibit a uniformity?

A: Surely, yes.

Q: Regardless of location.

A: Correct.

Q: So, for example, if we consider the make-up of the brain, those atoms are no different in kind from atoms wherever in the universe they are found.

A: That’s true. The brain is composed entirely of these tiny particles. And the particles, everywhere in the universe, without exception, flow and interact and collide without any exertion of free will. It’s an unending stream of cause and effect.

Q: And when you think to yourself, “I’ll get breakfast now,” what is that?

A: The thought?

Q: Yes.

A: Ultimately, it is the outcome of particles in motion.

Q: You were compelled to have that thought.

A: As odd as that may seem, yes. Of course, we tell ourselves stories to present ourselves with a different version of reality, but those stories are social or cultural constructs.

Q: And those “stories” we tell ourselves—they aren’t freely chosen rationalizations, either. We have no choice about that.

A: Well, yes. That’s right.

Q: So there is nothing in the human brain that allows us the possibility of free will.

A: Nothing at all.

Q: And as we are sitting here right now, sir, looking at each other, sitting and talking, this whole conversation is spooling out in the way that it must. Every word. Neither you nor I is really choosing what we say.

A: I may not like it, but yes, it’s deterministic destiny. The particles flow.

Q: When you pause to consider a question I ask you…even that act of considering is mandated by the motion of atomic and sub-atomic particles. What appears to be you deciding how to give me an answer…that is a delusion.

A: The act of considering? Why, yes, that, too, would have to be determined. It’s not free. There really is no choice involved.

Q: And the outcome of this conversation, whatever points we may or may not agree upon, and the issues we may settle here, about this subject of free will versus determinism…they don’t matter at all, because, when you boil it down, the entire conversation was determined by our thoughts, which are nothing more than atomic and sub-atomic particles in motion—and that motion flows according to laws, none of which have anything to do with human choice.

A: The entire flow of reality, so to speak, proceeds according to determined sets of laws. Yes.

Q: And we are in that flow.

A: Most certainly we are.

Q: The earnestness with which we might try to settle this issue, our feelings, our thoughts, our striving—that is irrelevant. It’s window dressing. This conversation actually cannot go in different possible directions. It can only go in one direction.

A: That would ultimately have to be so.

Q: Now, are atoms and their components, and any other tiny particles in the universe…are any of them conscious?

A: Of course not. The particles themselves are not conscious.

Q: Some scientists speculate they are.

A: Some people speculate that the moon can be sliced and served on a plate with fruit.

Q: What do you think “conscious” means?

A: It means we participate in life. We take action. We converse. We gain knowledge.

Q: Any of the so-called faculties we possess—are they ultimately anything more than particles in motion?

A: Well, no, they aren’t. Because everything is particles in motion. What else could be happening in this universe? Nothing.

Q: All right. I’d like to consider the word “understanding.”

A: It’s a given. It’s real.

Q: How so?

A: The proof that it’s real, if you will, is that we are having this conversation. It makes sense to us.

Q: Yes, but how can there be understanding if everything is particles in motion? Do the particles possess understanding?

A: No they don’t.

Q: To change the focus just a bit, how can what you and I are saying have any meaning?

A: Words mean things.

Q: Again, I have to point out that, in a universe with no free will, we only have particles in motion. That’s all. That’s all we are. So where does “meaning” come from?

A: “We understand language” is a true proposition.

Q: You’re sure.

A: Of course.

Q: Then I suggest you’ve tangled yourself in a contradiction. In the universe you depict, there would be no room for understanding. Or meaning. There would be nowhere for it to come from. Unless particles understand. Do they?

A: No.

Q: Then where do “understanding” and “meaning” come from?

A: [Silence.]

Q: Furthermore, sir, if we accept your depiction of a universe of particles, then there is no basis for this conversation at all. We don’t understand each other. How could we?

A: But we do understand each other.

Q: And therefore, your philosophic materialism (no free will, only particles in motion) must have a flaw.

A: What flaw?

Q: Our existence contains more than particles in motion.

A: More? What would that be?

Q: Would you grant that whatever it is, it is non-material?

A: It would have to be, but…

Q: Then, driving further along this line, there is something non-material which is present, which allows us to understand each other, which allows us to comprehend meaning. We are conscious. Puppets are not conscious. As we sit here talking, I understand you. Do you understand me?

A: Of course.

Q: Then that understanding is coming from something other than particles in motion. Without this non-material quality, you and I would be gibbering in the dark.

A: You’re saying that, if all the particles in the universe, including those that make up the brain, possess no consciousness, no understanding, no comprehension of meaning, no freedom, then how can they give birth to understanding and freedom. There must be another factor, and it would have to be non-material.

Q: Yes. That’s what I’m saying. And I think you have to admit your view of determinism and particles in motion—that picture of the universe—leads to several absurdities.

A: Well…perhaps I’m forced to consider it. Otherwise, we can’t sit here and understand each other.

Q: You and I do understand each other.

A: I hadn’t thought it through this way before, but if there is nothing inherent in particles that gives rise to understanding and meaning, then everything is gibberish. Except it isn’t gibberish. Yes, I seem to see a contradiction. Interesting.

Q: And if these non-material factors—understanding and meaning—exist, then other non-material factors can exist.

A: For example, freedom. I suppose so.

Q: And the drive to eliminate freedom in the world…is more than just the attempt to substitute one automatic reflex for another.

A: That would be…yes, that would be so.

Q: Scientists would be absolutely furious about the idea that, despite all their maneuvering, the most essential aspects of human life are beyond the scope of what they, the scientists, are “in charge of.”

A: It would be a naked challenge to the power of science.

Einstein puffed on his pipe and looked out over the valley. He took a sip of his beer. After a minute, he said, “Let me see if I can summarize this, because it’s really rather startling. The universe is nothing but particles. All those particles follow laws of motion. They aren’t free. The brain is made up entirely of those same particles. Therefore, there is nothing in the brain that would give us freedom. These particles also don’t understand anything, they don’t make sense of anything, they don’t grasp the meaning of anything. Since the brain, again, is made up of those particles, it has no power to allow us to grasp meaning or understand anything. But we do understand. We do grasp meaning. Therefore, we are talking about qualities we possess which are not made out of energy. These qualities are entirely non-material.”

He nodded.

“In that case,” he said, “there is…oddly enough, a completely different sphere or territory. It’s non-material. Therefore, it can’t be measured. Therefore, it has no beginning or end. If it did, it would be a material continuum and we could measure it.”

He pointed to the valley.

“That has energy. But what does it give me? Does it allow me to be conscious? Does it allow me to be free, to understand meaning? No.”

Then he laughed. He looked at me.

“I’m dead,” he said, “aren’t I? I didn’t realize it until this very moment.”

I shook my head. “No. I would say you WERE dead until this moment.”

He grinned. “Yes!” he said. “That’s a good one. I WAS dead.”

He stood up.

“Enough of this beer,” he said. “I have some schnapps inside. Let me get it. Let’s drink the good stuff! After all, I’m apparently Forever. And so are you. And so are we all.”