I do appreciate what you're saying but like I said we don't always make the best choice (ie going to bed might be better for us, just 'cos we make a bad choice doesn't give free will, the point is we would always have made that bad choice).Jedoro said:Not quite. Sometimes it's a better idea to go to sleep (i.e. work the next day) but people still don't. Also, hunger: food's sitting right there, no negative consequences, but some people still choose not to eat.iRiis said:There's a difference between giving in to physical stimuli and "going against what our brain tells us" which you originally claimed. In the above case you would only not go to sleep if you brain told you it would be a better idea not to - whether it is 'correct' is irrelevant as we are irrational creatures - for example to stay up and play computer games or do whatever. Your brain has taken all the available stimuli and made a choice, you are slave to that.Jedoro said:Simple one: say someone's tired. If there was no free will, the person would meet that need and immediately go to sleep, but who goes to sleep every time they start to feel tired?iRiis said:Can you really? Can you give just one example of this having happened in the whole of human history? I don't think you can.Jedoro said:Yes, it does, because despite what our brains tell us (logic, emotion, pain), we can and often do make the decision to go against that.
But you did say that was a simple one, maybe you want to fire another?
What you are describing is what I described above (on this page) as freedom, which is a quite different concept to freewill. You are free to go to bed or stay up, but the choice you end up making is certainly not a free one, it is dictated by chemical processes etc as I described. Now if you were being tortured and not allowed to sleep, then in this case you wouldn't even have the original choice, so you're restricted to what you can do. This is a lack of freedom.
Freedom is whether circumstance allow for a choice to be made, free will is whether you make that choice anyways. I'm certainly not "free" to yell that there's a fire in a movie theater, but I can make the choice to if I want due to free will. Resisting any temptation is free will, because there is the impulse from your brain to take a certain course of action, but you resist because you can.
What about actions with no stimulus? There, I just snapped my fingers for no reason. Who says we don't control some of those chemical processes, or decide when they start? Actions and reactions are two different things, and it doesn't take a complete comprehension of the human body to do something with it.
You understand my point about freedom, so I won't go further there.
"Resisting temptation" is a perfect example of your mind weighing up the options and deciding what you will benefit most from. The spontaneity of you clicking your fingers was a way of your mind taking in the stimulus that is our dialogue, and coming to a conclusion to snap your fingers. I'm afraid that you as a biological information processing machine were going to come to that conclusion and slave to the future of you snapping your fingers.
I don't think we actually disagree on anything.
We make all our decisions. Whether they were the only ones we could make if we went back in time is debatable because of the probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics. However we both agree (I think, correct me if I'm wrong) that we are a system which processes information and decides to take actions as the result. Or we might even ignore information and act against it if our brains process and come to that conclusion.
What I am trying to say is that there is no 'pure' abstract idea of free will. Something like that can only come if we were somehow above the universe we live in, if we had a spirit or something like that. As it is we're a complicated bag of atoms that is meaningless in the scale of the universe, and as much slaves to it as that poor rock sitting outside in the cold.
Messaged you my email, lets talk more :]Sampler said:[...]