This is my stance too. As with so many things, it's not really a question of either/or.gLoveofLove said:I'm a soft determinist. So in other words, I believe both that determinism is true and that I have free Will. I may not have been able to choose who I was born as, but since then I have used the tools that I have to decide who I want to be.
From my thinking, it exists to a degree. And the meaningful debate happens when we try to hash out where, in our "decision-making process," the line is crossed.Spectral Dragon said:A thought struck me while reading the replies on the thread about what makes us human. A few mentioned free will. But lately I've been wondering if that really exists.
Considering biology, society, language and history affect all of us, do we really have free will as such, or are we governed by everything around us? After all, we can choose not to eat, for a time, but eventually have to if we want to survive. And then it's our body that decides if we want something spicy, sweet etc.
What's your take on this? Do we have free will at all or just the illusion of choice?
(Yes, I realise this thread's been done before, but not for quite some time. This thread again, but with new opinions, hopefully.)
Not really. It just means I responded to stimuli - another thread on here - combined with my natural curiosity, of which I've never had control of, compelled me to do it. I could have resisted, but that is a hypothetical scenario that doesn't exist in this universe. It was a choice, but a logical one. I'm not saying free will doesn't exist, but just because I question something does not mean I have free will. It only means I have consciousness.The Heik said:Well the fact that you're questioning whether or not free will exists is effectively proof of free will, as without it the question would never have arisen.
Exactly.loc978 said:I've always looked to the available option of apathy, inaction and eventual slow death as absolute proof of the existence of free will. After all^that right there is a choice, no matter how hard anyone wants to believe it isn't^Spectral Dragon said:we can choose not to eat, for a time, but eventually have to if we want to survive.
oh everyone has free will, but we are also subject to consequences afterwards.Spectral Dragon said:A thought struck me while reading the replies on the thread about what makes us human. A few mentioned free will. But lately I've been wondering if that really exists.
Considering biology, society, language and history affect all of us, do we really have free will as such, or are we governed by everything around us? After all, we can choose not to eat, for a time, but eventually have to if we want to survive. And then it's our body that decides if we want something spicy, sweet etc.
What's your take on this? Do we have free will at all or just the illusion of choice?
(Yes, I realise this thread's been done before, but not for quite some time. This thread again, but with new opinions, hopefully.)
The question is fundamentally flawed. You ask "Does free will exist?" which frames a simple "yes or no" scenario, when the truth is more complex than that (which is usually the case).Spectral Dragon said:Considering biology, society, language and history affect all of us, do we really have free will as such, or are we governed by everything around us? After all, we can choose not to eat, for a time, but eventually have to if we want to survive. And then it's our body that decides if we want something spicy, sweet etc.
Actually:BiscuitTrouser said:Determinalism, nothing "magic" happens in the universe, only physics. 100% prediactable physics. So i can predict the motion, reaction and moves of your brain cells and predict every one of your actions. Google it.Princess Rose said:Of course free will exists. The fact that we can ask that and question it is the greatest evidence that it is the case.Spectral Dragon said:A thought struck me while reading the replies on the thread about what makes us human. A few mentioned free will. But lately I've been wondering if that really exists.
Considering biology, society, language and history affect all of us, do we really have free will as such, or are we governed by everything around us? After all, we can choose not to eat, for a time, but eventually have to if we want to survive. And then it's our body that decides if we want something spicy, sweet etc.
What's your take on this? Do we have free will at all or just the illusion of choice?
(Yes, I realise this thread's been done before, but not for quite some time. This thread again, but with new opinions, hopefully.)
After all, you CAN starve yourself to death. You CAN choose to not eat. You'll be really hungry, but you can choose to not eat until you die. Monks have done so. It's not the best example, perhaps, but it does address your question above.
Are we influenced by everything around us? Of course. But, while that does affect our psyche, we can still choose to go against those urges. We can choose which urges to embrace, and how we embrace them.
You can "choose" to starve to death. But the atom that hits the receptor that sends the pulse to reject all food was set in motion a billion billion years ago when the big bang happened.
Honestly unless you are a fundamental christian and believe all science is lies i dont understand how you can believe in free will. How does "random" happen in your brain? DId that electrical charge in yoru brain just HAPPEN? Did you just create energy? Well done, all thermodynamics is a lie! Unless you render all physics moot, you cannot just change the way an atom bounces in your brain by magic, you cant create electricity from nothing in your mind to "choose" something.