I just see the argument unfolding like this between Skeptic (Sk) and Proponent (Pr)
Skeptic: Free will is incoherent, so it is impossible for even God to have it.
Propoponet: Not even God?! Why is that?
Sk: Free will would have to be neither determined nor random.
Pr: Is there a proof everything has to be determined or random?
Sk: ...No. But it still doesn't make sense. How would free will work?
Pr: If by "How" you mean some sub-level processes/parts constituting the act of selecting among possibilities, then it's a trick question. Free will is an irreducible act.
Sk: There should still be a "how" description.
Pr: You mean "How" something is neither determined nor random? But you didn't provide any proof those are the only two options?
Sk: I'm willing to forget about the dichotomy, if you give me a "how" explanation. After all I can make a decision by flipping a coin or following a series of steps, and that explains "how" a decision was made.
Pr: But isn't the decision occurring when you decide to flip the coin, or follow the steps, or some combination of steps + indeterminism such as a coin flip or dice roll? It seems that is the point where you make a "meta-level" decision to answer the original question of selecting among possibilities by basing the choice on these steps +/- indeterminism?
So there is no actual "how" explained. In fact at any point in the chosen process you could choose to switch to another process, or just make the decision directly.
Sk: ....But even so there can still be a "how" explanation and nobody has given one.
Pr: Okay...Can you give an example of some other "how" explanation [so I can understand what you're looking for]?
Sk: You can see how a computer works, all the way down to the bottom level of physics.
Pr: But a computer has many processes [constituted of individual events], each of which involve one possibility occurring out of many possibilities. And none of those - whether determined or random - has been explained, all we have is an appeal to Dualist notions of "Laws of Physics" for determinism or the illogical idea that something can happen without any cause.
In fact, given the "Laws of Physics" themselves would need Meta-Laws to explain why they don't change it seems "determinism" is just a special kind of randomness?
Sk: ....But we can look at the bottom level of physics and find only random events that become determined at higher levels.
Pr: Why would we think those events at the QM level are random?
Sk: Because we can't predict either the time and/or place of their occurrence despite having information about prior state.
Pr: Right but we can find patterns those events resolve to that allow them to be modeled by statistics and probability. So they can't be fully random either, in fact it makes the most sense to say these events are neither determined nor random.
Sk: They are random, they just have some constraints based on the prior frame [of states].
Pr: But Randomness doesn't make any logical sense, and the fact the events have relations to the past state even shows this isn't random. Even if one accepted randomness, how can randomness be constrained and still be random?
Sk: Well even *if* we accept non-random, non-determined events we would still need more of any explanation than that.
Pr: Well one good example is the Metaphysics of Dispositional Causal Powers. Here's a list of papers that start the bottom level of causation and go all the way to the top to explain how free will is a Rational Two-Way Causal Power.
Sk: Can you summarize those papers?
Pr: I could, but can you tell me the criteria that is to be met so I know what that kind of effort would go towards?
Sk: The criteria is my personal satisfaction.
Pr: Yeah, I think I'll pass on putting too much more effort into this as I think it's now been shown Philosophically / Mathematically / Empirically that Free Will is not incoherent. That at the least God can have it in a logically possible world.
QED, Resolved, however you want to say it there's no argument left for the claim that free will is incoherent that I can see...
Skeptic: Free will is incoherent, so it is impossible for even God to have it.
Propoponet: Not even God?! Why is that?
Sk: Free will would have to be neither determined nor random.
Pr: Is there a proof everything has to be determined or random?
Sk: ...No. But it still doesn't make sense. How would free will work?
Pr: If by "How" you mean some sub-level processes/parts constituting the act of selecting among possibilities, then it's a trick question. Free will is an irreducible act.
Sk: There should still be a "how" description.
Pr: You mean "How" something is neither determined nor random? But you didn't provide any proof those are the only two options?
Sk: I'm willing to forget about the dichotomy, if you give me a "how" explanation. After all I can make a decision by flipping a coin or following a series of steps, and that explains "how" a decision was made.
Pr: But isn't the decision occurring when you decide to flip the coin, or follow the steps, or some combination of steps + indeterminism such as a coin flip or dice roll? It seems that is the point where you make a "meta-level" decision to answer the original question of selecting among possibilities by basing the choice on these steps +/- indeterminism?
So there is no actual "how" explained. In fact at any point in the chosen process you could choose to switch to another process, or just make the decision directly.
Sk: ....But even so there can still be a "how" explanation and nobody has given one.
Pr: Okay...Can you give an example of some other "how" explanation [so I can understand what you're looking for]?
Sk: You can see how a computer works, all the way down to the bottom level of physics.
Pr: But a computer has many processes [constituted of individual events], each of which involve one possibility occurring out of many possibilities. And none of those - whether determined or random - has been explained, all we have is an appeal to Dualist notions of "Laws of Physics" for determinism or the illogical idea that something can happen without any cause.
In fact, given the "Laws of Physics" themselves would need Meta-Laws to explain why they don't change it seems "determinism" is just a special kind of randomness?
Sk: ....But we can look at the bottom level of physics and find only random events that become determined at higher levels.
Pr: Why would we think those events at the QM level are random?
Sk: Because we can't predict either the time and/or place of their occurrence despite having information about prior state.
Pr: Right but we can find patterns those events resolve to that allow them to be modeled by statistics and probability. So they can't be fully random either, in fact it makes the most sense to say these events are neither determined nor random.
Sk: They are random, they just have some constraints based on the prior frame [of states].
Pr: But Randomness doesn't make any logical sense, and the fact the events have relations to the past state even shows this isn't random. Even if one accepted randomness, how can randomness be constrained and still be random?
Sk: Well even *if* we accept non-random, non-determined events we would still need more of any explanation than that.
Pr: Well one good example is the Metaphysics of Dispositional Causal Powers. Here's a list of papers that start the bottom level of causation and go all the way to the top to explain how free will is a Rational Two-Way Causal Power.
Sk: Can you summarize those papers?
Pr: I could, but can you tell me the criteria that is to be met so I know what that kind of effort would go towards?
Sk: The criteria is my personal satisfaction.
Pr: Yeah, I think I'll pass on putting too much more effort into this as I think it's now been shown Philosophically / Mathematically / Empirically that Free Will is not incoherent. That at the least God can have it in a logically possible world.
QED, Resolved, however you want to say it there's no argument left for the claim that free will is incoherent that I can see...
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
(This post was last modified: 2021-04-18, 06:36 AM by Sciborg_S_Patel.)
- Bertrand Russell