(2019-03-07, 04:37 AM)Laird Wrote: A lot of material has been posted, mostly by Sci, to this forum in various threads that you could read yourself to find out why "proponents prone", so to speak, on free will, consciousness, and mind. It's probably more fruitful for you to read some of that stuff and get to the bottom of it that way than for us to go around in circles here.
I think everything that could be asked is available here in this thread as, at least, a cursory starting point?
If the question is "How is a free decision made?" it's the Inner/Final Cause that determines the effects of the External/Efficient Cause, as per Sartre's "
Freedom is what You Do with what is Done to You". If one asks why that that's not just randomness I'd say randomness/determinism is a statement about our probabilistic confidence and doesn't cancel the need for causal explanations. As shown by quoting Feynman in QED, you can model reflection of photons with a Random Variable without knowing how the photons "decide" (his quotes) among themselves which will bounce back.
I'd go further in pointing out Randomness & Determinism are external probability projections, and how they cannot be applied to Unique Events - and b/c of an agent's memory (what Eric Weiss calls "the experience of past experiences") + emotional/physical state every decision is a Unique Event. You cannot "spatialize" the agent's decisions into points for a curve fitting b/c "points" here imply identity of relevant conditions, and beyond that you cannot represent the inner state of a being with "force" vectors representing different levels of influence for different mental/emotional concerns.
Thus from the outside a free willed being would look random, but that's the mistake of discounting its inner state. Even then as an external attribution it is mistaken identification of the determinist/random poles that confuse us here. The far end of the determinist pole is the event that is demanded by Inexorable Fate, such that there no genuine alternatives that could have happened. The far end of the random pole is Meillassoux's Hyperchaos, randomness that allows for no probability distribution. These are obviously to be regarded as abstractions, so any seemingly necessitated external cause in real life is obviously a disposition in the sense it can be blocked from happening & any seemingly random cause that can be modeled with an Random Variable is actually neither entirely contingent nor entirely random.
Another example of something occupying the middle country of that spectrum would be an electron with a positional cloud that helps constitute a [thrown] ball. When I throw the ball the positional cloud - which represents places the electron might end up at - shifts with the arc of my toss. So I've influenced the randomness of the position cloud without completely necessitating the outcome. Again, not only is this neither deterministic nor random, but I am a causal precursor that translates the Possibility Space of the electron's positions.
So much for the determinist/random dichotomy being a problem (thank you Henri Bergson), but there is still the question of a positive metaphysical account, which concerns the question of dividing causes into Inner/Final and External/Efficient.
If one asks why there needs to be a Final Cause I'd point out that randomness as a term used in reference to particles is used to denote our expectations. We have an expectation for something to happen but instead we find we don't know why there is a selection of possibilities instead of just one. But then, if that's the problem with randomness then even when there is only one outcome ("deterministic") we don't have an explanation for why something
else doesn't happen. To appeal to Natural Laws leads to new problems:
1. How would a non-physical entity like a Natural Law interact with physical entities?
2. Even if such a thing were possible something within the seemingly bound entities would have allow the interaction and this would be outside the binding Law.
3. What stops these Laws from changing in their constancy and/or their universality?
Thus just as randomness is a probability expression that leaves us ignorant of possibility selection, so to determinism is a special kind of randomness where the same outcome happens without real explanation. So neither the brute fact of "Natural Law" nor the brute fact of "Randomness" cancel the need for something at the event level to select among the possible effects. This possibility selection is what I refer to as Inner Cause or Final Cause.
Looking at how Feynman discussing photon reflection - and Penrose discussing superposition - both end up using the word "decide" it seems clear that given the varied good arguments for Idealism/Theism/Panpsychism that mental causation is a candidate for Inner Causation. As noted by William James, "chance" is just a negative connotation for something having causal power within itself, which makes more sense that "randomness" which suggests a violation of the Principle of Sufficient Reason...and like feces in a wine barrel you cannot have a little bit of randomness
(whether it's one drop of wine in a barrel of feces or vice versa what you've got is a barrel of feces)...
I suppose one doesn't have to think of the Inner Cause of the particle as having anything to do with consciousness, at least not within the confines of what has been said so far in this post. But the comparison to Free Will is apt - Inner Causes have to be, within the event where they decide among possibilities, fundamentally simple by which I mean non-composite. Not to mention at the level of any event - given change is observed - there has to be a Ground wherein something is fundamental/axiomatic that determines why something rather than
something-else happens...and the only thing that even seems to fit the bill is Consciousness making decisions.
Of course for Free Will to simply break away from the causal chain of the past is to have an entity that we'd regard as insane. So this Freedom has to be within the causal sequence, which is why Sartre's quote is relevant. Free Will is properly located as the possibility selection ("
what you do") of some prior set of events (
"with what is done to you"). So Free Will is the selection of the
Effect of what has come before, not a cause unto itself or leaping outside of the causal chain.
The way Free Will gets influenced by the past is analogous to how my toss of a ball shifts the position cloud of that electron helping to make up the ball - the prior events (Efficient/External Causes) translate the Possibility Space that I can select from via use of Inner/Final Cause. This is also how past decisions go from Inner/Final to External/Efficient causes, because the decisions you made in the prior Now contributed to your translation to a new Possibility Space corresponding to the present Now. (thank you Whitehead!)
As to how the World comes to be presented as a Possibility Space, that is all the stuff about Intentionality/Subjectivity/Rationality being immaterial that was mentioned in prior posts in this thread (specifically how
Intentionality goes from Mind --> World and thus runs against the World impinging on the senses + how
you can't get a causal account of Intentionality w/out recourse to Intentionality).
Also Gregg Rosenberg's work on how all causation is carried by consciousness, though this really didn't play a huge role so far it does relate to Whitehead's ideas of how causation works and came to inform the agent who possesses Inner/Final Causal Power.
Anyway, the point of all this was originally to answer the question of how free will could work. Whether there are Final/Inner Causes in Nature seems to be the big question on which this all hinges. I believe that without Final/Inner Cause you run into the issues with "Randomness" and "Natural Laws" I mentioned above.
Lots more could be said, but this - as a restating of Whitehead with some help from other authors - seems like an answer to the "how" question. You could apply the "how" to different pieces of my dissection of events, but that strikes me as rather cheeky given Physicalism sustains itself on Luck alone given there's no Ground-floor reason why
any event happens.
I'd also be curious if there's another example of something that selects among possibilities (necessary for change to occur) that isn't a Mind.
So we have the negative account, why arguments trying to describe Mind from the World fail + why the determinism/randomness dichotomy is a non-concern. And we have a positive account that involves Intentionality & Final/Inner Cause.
There's also an indirect argument for all causation as mental causation which is that when you look at Rationality/Subjectivity/Intentionality you find they are immaterial yet somehow obviously involved with the brain. The best explanation is the brain is either made of Mind or a substance where Mind is not subordinate to Matter, like Sri Aurobindo conceiving the Godhead as the unity of Will & Force that makes up the world in panentheistic fashion (see also Plotinus' One, Chinese top-down Panpsychism, Aztec Neutral Monism, etc...).
Also most classical theist type arguments regarding a Prime Mover or Assigner of Final Causes could be regarded as indirect arguments for all causation being mental causation.