this post was submitted on 04 Nov 2023
68 points (93.6% liked)
Science
3222 readers
40 users here now
General discussions about "science" itself
Be sure to also check out these other Fediverse science communities:
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I feel as if the answer to this is, by general consensus, yes. You have free will.
Like, does Evil exist? Scientifically? No, absolutely not, but the word still has meaning. If I say, "that man is evil!" And you look at him and recognize his terribleness, then, sure: he is IS evil.
Just because something isn't objectively, physically quantifiable, doesn't mean that it's not a valid rational construct.
I think the actual argument which has been making the rounds recently, is not, "do humans have free will?" But, Rather is, "are humans accountable for their actions, given that thier will is significantly biased by factors outside of their control / awareness?"
It's just that doesn't get people's attention.
Ps, I believe that fundamentally, all physical interactions are deterministic in practice. Any conscious or rational being is fundamentally set in motion with the arrow of time, and if you could develop a fuzzy quantum state based intelligence, you'd only succeed in creating a person with slightly more random ideas. There would be no meaningful uplift in "free will." However, I also Believe that this is an absurd deconstruction of heady topics. It's akin to telling someone that a table doesn't exist because it's just a decomposing tree. Free will is a rational idea for human animals, and judged by that standard, fulfills it's purpose in describing the experience of conscious decision making.
For people arguing they have free will, they typically mean they have the ability to do other than what they did do. That is, whenever they make a choice, they do so under the belief that they could have, in principle, made a different choice. As far as science is concerned, such a free will does not exist, because the behaviors you exhibit appear to be completely explainable in terms of the environment impressing upon you, and the effects that impression has on your neural activity. There is no "you" making free decisions in this picture. There's just stuff bumping into other stuff, and how is that free?
Regarding a general consensus of free will, that's just not even an argument anyone should care about. Plenty of people are flatly told they have free will because, "they don't have a choice, God made them with free will". Others/most are simply uneducated or under-read on the subject. That's fine, but it doesn't mean their opinion should weigh on our conclusions. If you show most people an optical illusion and ask them if it appears to be moving, they'd say yes, even though science will tell you there's nothing moving.
I personally am a hard deterministic regarding free will. I think we have a will but nothing about it is free. It is subject to natural laws just as a rock rolling down a cliff. That's fine. There's a related philosophical position of compatibilism, which believes that we have a determined will, but that the truth of the determination does not undercut our ability to talk as if and use the phrase free will as if we really do have such a thing. In this sense, compatibilists would say we don't have the ability to do other than what we are determined to do, but since we might not yet know what we are determined to do, then that ignorance captures what is meant by free will. So compatibilists are determinists, they just think free will as a concept is compatible with that determinism.
I don't like the "There's just stuff bumping into other stuff, and how is that free?" Argument. I feel like it's unessisarily reductive.
A stone washing down a river might be guided deterministically by fundimental forces, as are all of the actions of a human brain.
However, the stone was dislodged by erosion. My will was set into motion by abstract human concepts. My memories, biases, emotions, education, habits, etc. these are not fundamental or physical forces. I was free, uninhibited by state or peers, to decide based on these internal factors.
Sure, if you rewinded time and replayed it, I would always make that decision, and so would the stone wash down the river, but the human had a meaningful perception of free will.
I would argue that free will is not a physical concept, but a phycological one. It succeeds in describing the experience of mulling over a decision, and freely acting upon it. It is fair and reasonable to say it, just like in my example it is fair and reasonable for me to say a terrible person is evil.
If you twist the definition of free will contain some mention of subatomic autonomy, then sure, it doesn't exist, but the concept predates such ideas...
Heck, even the Bible- I'm an atheist- but the point of writing that God gave humans free will was the expression of the human experience. The writers wanted to explain why being a human FELT different from being a stone. They were grappling with the experience of consciousness in a spiritual way. The original text never claims to be the ultimate expression of physics. It's reductive to dismiss the text as meaningless just because some later "free will" proponents claimed that the brain is quantum or whatever.
Sorry, I agree with you about the nature of the universe. I just think these reductive debates are, in general, unproductive. I believe they misrepresent the subject from both sides.
That's what it is to be a compatibilist. They are determinists who believe that there is still a meaningful use of the phrase free will, despite the apparent determinism of the universe. They would redefine free will to not mean I have the ability to supervene on the natural laws, but that when you make a decision absent certain forces compelling a particular choice, that's what we mean by free will.