While I have already conceded in this thread that arguments for determinism can never actually prove that there is no free will, I doubt you or any one else can muster a decent argument for its existence, other than blind faith thinly veiled in bad examples of 'choice' in action. I suspect this is the real reason you do not try. Even my philosophy professor who staunchly defended freewill against me and the other determinists in the class, admitted that he could only say that he believed in free will and could produce no rational argument for it. It is in the nature of our consciousness (itself a product of the brain) that we perceive the world and ourselves as though we have free will, but this is no more a guarantee than it is that we all perceive colours the same. Staunchly holding on to the idea of free will in the absence of a rational argument suggests to me an inability to be skeptical of ones own perception of reality and/or a profound attachment to a narrative of self.Ponyholder said:Free will exists, regardless of whether or not one wishes to believe in it. Same as love and mental illnesses (yes, I have heard of people saying that Mental Illnesses don't exist, it is all *made up* in the person's mind).
I am not going to elaborate on an absurd question like this, as there is no point. There is little chance to sway someone who so devotedly believes that free will doesn't exist that it actually does. Let them believe everything is "written in stone". I will be over here living my life to the fullest that I can.
On the subject of mental health that you brought up, I am aware of people who deny its existence. I live in Northern Ireland where there are many 'hardcore' Christians who also deny its existence. It is funny though that you brought this up, because it seems that the chief reason they do so, is that they find objectionable its use in explaining and excusing (to some degree) human behaviours. In other words, it strongly conflicts with their world view of the connected concepts of Free Will, Sin, and Judgement. It is extremely difficult to reconcile the idea that murdering a child is an irredeemable Sin for which you will burn in hell, with the idea (or fact) that a women experienced such crippling and psychosis inducing post-natal depression that she murdered her child in a fit of insanity. An idea that is even legally considered a temporary lose of free will. TO believe in free will and mental illness simultaneously is like saying that we have free will, except for when our brain chemistry alters sightly. To which I ask, what is the magic balance of brain chemistry that produces free will, and if all people have slightly different brain chemistry, how does that even work?
Finally,your contention that you will be 'living [your] life to the fullest that [you] can',thereby implying that those who do not believe in free will are somehow lacklustre, cynical or depressed is completely absurd. I have believed in determinism since I reached the age of reason, and anyone who knows me knows I have a zeal for life. I don't even need to prove that, the very idea is a house of cards. Its like Christians believing that atheism results in some existential crisis that causes depression at best, and evil at worst. Even in you are not an atheist you must surely know that is not the case. Abstract believes about the nature of reality and our place in it rarely, if ever, influence how we think, feel and behave.