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03-18-2003, 08:59 PM | #11 |
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an idea
Isn't the real question behind this "does randomness exist?"
I can say that I don't have free will when I hold my breath because something had to influence me to want to hold my breath. My holdign my breath is only a reactionary response to my enviroment. If I decide to flip out and start killing people there has to be some reason I began to flip out and kill people right? Whether it be chemical imbalance, shell shock, abject poverty, a bad day, there is still always soemthing that triggered that event. I get up. I walk to the kitchen. I get food. I go back to the computer (with food for consumption) and start typing. Is this free will? I had the choice, in theory, but there was something that triggered that choice. Isn't the goal of psychology to figure out why we do the things we do? Give somebody a stimulus record how they respond. If you record enough reactions will you find correlations between upbringing/genes? Now why did I even bring randomness into this? Because to me that seems to be the really question. Is anything in existance unexpanible (ecluding existence)? Bodies of matter (atoms, molecules, planets, etc.) follow laws of physics and laws of chemistry. If you throw a rock up in the air it falls back down. If you put water vapor in a pressurized room (that is above 100°C) and keep increasing the preasure you will eventually get water in its liquid form. So is there any cases where a reaction defys the laws and if so, is in inexpicable why it defys the laws? If the answer is yes, then i believe in free will. But if not, then I do not believe in free will, because it seems that all things can be predicted given enough information and the human experiance is far from exempt from this principle. But I think life is a lot like Space Mountian® (that roller coaster in Diseny Land where the whole thing is in the dark)... It might be predetermined, but we can't tell before we get there, and isnt that the real fun of life? |
03-19-2003, 06:02 AM | #12 | ||||
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Hello, Kip
Having gone through your piece in more detail, I have to thank you in explaining such a complicated position so well. Unfortunately, there is still some confusion in my mind, so I would like your elaboration on a few points if that’s OK. (I take it that “freedom of action” only refers to the degrees of freedom an entity like ourselves is capable of, with no concession that we can make conscious choices). It seems to me that throughout, you bring in concepts that depend on an idea of “freedom to make choices” for their force: here are some examples. Quote:
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In short, part of your article’s strength comes from precisely by having one foot in the “free will” camp. There are a few more points, but I don’t want to dazzle you with my insight all at once hem hem, and I look forward to your clarification. Take care, KI. |
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03-19-2003, 11:05 AM | #13 | |||||
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Nothing impossible will have occurred. In this situation where there is absolute similarity in the conditions of the alternatives (apart from mental considerations), the one difference would be the consciousness of the person who is to make the choice. The person's "attention" can only be focused on one alternative at a time. And this difference (caused by consciouness) between the two alternatives, can serve as the basis for a choice. Quote:
I have to run. |
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03-19-2003, 11:26 AM | #14 |
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Something I would like to add to this discussion:
1. We have a whole strata of unconscious memories contributing to add up to the plus/minus determination of a decision. We are unable to prevent this. 2. We rely on memory, conscious as well as unconscious, to make decisions. Memories comprise experience, which categorizes the process of conclusion-making as experientially motivated. 3. Whether we are hard determinists or not, we must admit that we do not bootstrap ourselves. Even as we make choices and direct our lives, we are not naive enough to think we have orchestrated that ability to become the person who made those choices. As Strawson says, "Luck swallows everything." |
03-19-2003, 10:34 PM | #15 | |||
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1. I say that humans do not possess either internal or external freedom. This is false. Humans possess external freedom to the extent that differences in the person's state of mind (mood) account for different answers to the same decisions. 2. I claim that my ethic is informed by hard determinism to treat humans like hurricanes. This is too strong. Rather, there is a continuum between holding people as perfectly rational, morally responsible agents and regarding people as mindless phenomena like hurricanes. By claim is that hard determinism pushes a person towards the hurricane end, away from a natural inclination, in our ignorance of human's mechanical nature, that is too far towards personal responsibility. I also claim that the distinction between hurricanes and humans is more quantitative than qualititative, in that verbally commicating is simply physically manipulating a very complex system with audio waves. In that sense humans are no different than any other physical system that presents a danger to humans, only more complex. 3. My argument only applies to a narrow, though historical and important, notion of moral responsibility. My first response to you is one of confusion. You assert that some adverse consequences follow from my premises but I do not see anything close to a reasonable arguments as to why these should follow. You also seem to jump from claim to claim. For example, you claim (I understand) that my arguments should undermine: 1. Sensations. For example, I should deny pleasure in having written the essay. Pleasure is perfectly compatible with what I have written. Perhaps you are claiming that I may feel pleasure but that this pleasure is undeserved? That is a more subtle, and much more respectable criticism. You may be correct. But our pleasure reward system is a result of evolution and can hardly be "thought away". I am not sure if this is a sufficient reply. Indeed, if you are correct, you have only demonstrated that, in my taking pleasure in my essay, I am not fully appreciating the consequences of my own logic. In that case I am being a hypocrite, and if my rational logic contradicts my natural feelings - so much the less for my natural feelings. 2. Intelligence. You compare an intelligent system such as the brain to clocks and clouds. In one sense, which I think is irrelevant, that is true. The laws of physics are operating equal on every part, whether that particle is a part of the brain or cloud. But that fails to consider the importance of patterns and also that computation can be reducible. I wish to emphasize that what I have written is perfectly compatible with intelligent systems. I should hope that my robot example would have demonstrated this. If you disagree, you need to provide a better argument than simply asserting that brains are like unintelligent systems such as clouds. Quote:
I also argue that the motivation of the surgeon is irrelevant. If a surgeon maliciously manipulates you - we deny your responsibility. But if an a surgeon mindlessly performs the same action with no motivation, we STILL exempt you from responsibility. The surgeon's motivations are irrelevant. This is the heart of probably the strongest argument for hard determinism. Here is an important point: Quote:
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03-20-2003, 05:13 PM | #16 | |
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Re: an idea
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03-20-2003, 05:36 PM | #17 |
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Kip,
Thanks for responding with another clearly-written reply. And also thank you for mentioning when it seems to you that one of my points can be interpreted with more subtlety, and that you didn’t write me off as hopelessly confusing. I’m even relieved, in a way, that my points were hopping about like tree-frogs: I was worried that I was banging on about the same point over and over. (Namely, “In short, part of your article’s strength comes from precisely by having one foot in the “free will” camp.) I found it difficult how the hardest determinism can usefully employ concepts like “motivation by a desire”, “fondness”, “malice” etc. In fact, this is why I applauded your clarity: you could have gone through your piece with a blue pencil striking out all the words that appeared a bit “free will”-y, which would have made things more difficult to follow. Since your modifications help even more with clarification (and seems to throw off more useful lines of thought), I offer the blather below in the hope of reciprocation, and not as any putative rebuttal. I’ll finish by addressing some points to one of your modifications, as it is interesting in its own right. And now I know I misjudged the extremity of your position, I can retract those points on which they depend. 1) Sensations My point about taking pleasure (from the post before the one quoted) does tend towards the latter interpretation: Of course we feel pleasure, but the hardest determinism teaches this as an inevitable “mechanical” response by our bodies, with brain activity as a focus. This is well answered by your “perfectly rational morally responsible agents/hurricane continuum” (PRMRA/H for short). I’m not so quick to discount my feelings, by the way. They seem to be too useful. I’ve even heard how particle physicists found such feelings as pleasure and intellectual excitement a help in motivating their research. Not that that refutes your position. 2) Intelligence Again, now you mention the continuum, I can do a bit better than just mentioning clouds. Even though, as you rightly add, they are both physical systems, this is a trivial comparison. In this sense, the laws of physics are wide enough to encompass explanations for both, without one necessarily being subordinated to the other. But you seem to wish to go further: “ The laws of physics are operating equal on every part, whether that particle is a part of the brain or cloud”. Do we need to insist that the only laws that really concern us are those that help us to understand particles? Planetary motion, for example, seems fully understood without such laws, although we also know that planets are ultimately comprised of them. My trivial point translated would be something like stating that two entities may be found at divergent points on our “consciousness continuum”, and then trying to explain the behaviour of one end by making reference to the other. That these entities can be represented as points on a line, is the least interesting thing about them. We are more concerned with fruitfully elaborating the differences. Forgive my weak attempt at surgical humour. I was just thinking I wouldn’t like to be under his care (particularly if I had gone in for appendicitis). I still think (in terms of the continuum) that if we change the state of an entity (our poor sod of a patient) so that it slides down from one end to the other, we can’t use any information from the entity in its new place to help explain the position from where it started. (Other than confirming the validity of a continuum as such). If you say that, in the example “You twist the knobs of intelligence and complexity and the clock becomes a brain. So, from the premise, the conclusion might be that this difference is irrelevant”, the example itself might come under the heading of that same “irrelevance” that applies to clouds and people, given that the difference in complexity of behaviours in both cases is so vast. I myself, think that the clock/brain difference is far from irrelevant. A quick point about robots, prostheses etc. As far as I know we use these terms to describe products of our technology. Of course robots and computers can be made to echo aspects of a biological entity’s behaviour, but we have some way to go before we can state that in both cases the explanatory mechanism is the same: we will have to eventually account for the differences between bioogical development (inc. evolution) and human manufacture , for example. How far we can trust “determinism” as the product of deterministic brains? the concept may be due to forces we have no idea of yet. 3) The omnipotent observer: I didn’t, and I’m afraid to say, still don’t think he’s irrelevant, as you put him into a position of judgment. It’s not allowable that he can merely be conceivable: after all, free will is conceivable too. My point is that w have no evidence for such a being. I think, though, what would be allowed is something along the lines of a mechanism we can build that can distinguish and identify ranges of behaviours to an infinitely painstaking degree. If the mechanism can’t distinguish, then that will be very interesting (although still leaving the questions of (homologous?) mechanisms to one side). The PRMRA/H Continuum. This is really good. I’ll never have to mention clouds again as examples. I welcome your thoughts on the following: I would be happier in my own mind if the former term were something representing our position. If there is no evidence for PRMRA’s, we can’t allow them as one end of the continuum. We’re not such beings: because we show a fondness for our examples, we can’t be perfectly rational. Computers, which are, have some way to go before evidence of moral distinctions become apparent. I don’t discount the possibility, even though they may become so by different paths than the ones we seem to have taken. I also tend away from supernatural entities, on grounds of evidence. In your opinion, by the way, in marking off one end of the continuum by such PRMRA’s are they allowable as a real possibility? One wonders, in that case, whether biology will ever be up to the job. Perhaps technology will? To close, I want to stress that I’ve only addressed those points where my confusion leads to differences of opinion. I could have written half as much again on the points I agree with. I’ll just mention a couple of examples. Firstly, I agree entirely with the moral conclusions that you draw from our not having the free will you identify as “badly-defined”. Of course humility is necessary, once we start imagining that we are too special to be characterized as more than just mere animals. I also agree with your dismissal of the ”unopposed will”. I wish you would treat more explicitly the idea whether an opposed will has any place in the continuum. Finally, I can have no complaint with the following: “Pleasure is perfectly compatible with what I have written”. Looking forward to more of your essays, KI. PS: Obviously you won’t have time to write any more if I keep bothering you. Just reply to the points that you deem fit, while I study your posts some more. |
03-21-2003, 05:35 AM | #18 | |
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03-21-2003, 12:22 PM | #19 | |
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Besides, memories aren't all we have--we also have our desires, and our abstract reasoning, which are not the same thing as memories (though memories do I think influence our desires.) But again, if there are random mental events, then even desires and reasoning wouldn't determine behavior--because sometimes, they would occur randomly. |
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03-21-2003, 05:48 PM | #20 | |
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Another problem; even if random mental events could happen and make sense without any context, there would be no way to "bring them back" to recognize them and ponder them. And to top it all off, you still wouldn't be willing anything because it would be random. |
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