(2019-03-07, 08:22 PM)Kamarling Wrote: I'm not sure that I would agree with that at all. You have demanded a description of a choice while stipulating "random or deterministic". Are you saying that free choice must be either random or deterministic? Why can't we include subjective preference? Does subjectivity inevitably reduce to physical precursors (movement of particles, neuronal activity, etc.)? Or, to ask it another way: how do you define precursors?
I think of precursors as anything that can impact the currently experienced Present Moment,
by which I mean the Now that Einstein reportedly felt physics couldn't explain:
Quote:In 1963, philosopher Rudolf Carnap recalled a conversation he had with Einstein about what Einstein called "the Now." "Once, Einstein said that the problem of the Now worried him seriously," Carnap wrote. "He explained that the experience of the Now means something special for man, something essentially different from the past and the future, but that this important difference does not and cannot occur within physics. That this experience cannot be grasped by science seemed to him a matter of painful but inevitable resignation." He suspected, Carnap continued, "that there is something essential about the Now which is just outside of the realm of science."
To me what is essential about the Now is it is between the indeterminate future and the definitely determinate past, and from the decisions made in the Now we end up bringing a particular state of affairs out all states that could potentially exist into the actual. Future becomes Present, and Present becomes Past.
In an attempt to de-jargon an explanation from here (apologies for the repetition from posts you likely have read):
So regarding the above note re: Precursors, that would include not just subjective feelings and physical forces, but also whatever decision we made in the previous Now-Just-Past and all the old Nows-Long-Gone. Each
decision + all other factors beyond us determines what decisions will be available to us in the next Now. For an extreme example, if I decide to take a drug that knocks me out in the Present very soon there won't be any waking decisions left to me until the drug wears off. For a less extreme example that runs from the Present into the not-so-far Future, if I decide to go to a vegetarian restaurant and follow through all the way to said eatery I won't be able to select from any meat dishes but likely the number of veggie dishes I can choose from increases.
So then at any Present Moment there are a set of possible choices I can make, which is what "Possibility Space" refers to. We know of the possible choices available to us because of Consciousness, specifically "Intentionality" which refers to the Mind's ability to have Thoughts About Things --> Which includes things that don't exist like future potential states. Of course we also need Subjectivity, our ability to sense the world via qualia & Rationality by which we know what are realistic choices as well as likely consequences of such possible choices.
All of this goes into how a being with Free Will can make choices while still having its past be relevant b/c without taking into account the being's memory would make the choice devoid of greater meaning. What is noted in the above is that the past determines the choices available rather than determining the actual choice. This is what is meant by precursors being taken into account without necessitating a single outcome.
This is comparable to change in any reality. To have any kind of change something Potential (but not yet actualized) becomes Actual. Yet since nothing that is Potential exists in the Present, what is needed for change to occur is something that is already Actual. For example for an ice cube to melt and enter into the previously potential state of being water you need actual heat from, say, a fire.
However, why does the ice need to melt? Can it not stay frozen even in a lava bed? What ensures a particular cause produces a particular effect? This is the question I've returned to continuously -> When something happens, why doesn't
something else happen? There has to be something ensuring one outcome out of all the possible outcomes follows or there would be no change in the world.
We could say Natural Laws make ice melt, but what are they made of and how do they force a particular outcome? Even if there is something in the ice cube that allows a Law to be imposed on it, this characteristic would need to bind the ice to the Law...but why does this characteristic itself not change? Another Law? In fact, even laws could change - are they enforced by meta-laws?
Since we observe change happening, there has to be something more to causes than just something Actual actualizing a Potential State - we need something to make one outcome determinate. This would be the ice cube's Possibility Selector (what could be called Inner Cause or Final Cause).
So for any cause-effect relationship we have the presence of things that are Actual ("Efficient Cause" or "External Cause") and something within the entity undergoing change that selects from available Possible Effects ("Final Cause" or "Internal Cause").
To go back to the free being that incorporates its relevant Past, I'd use Sartre's definition of Free Will -> "Freedom is what you do with what is done to you." So the past leading up to the decision is the Efficient/External Cause (meaning the causal precursors that led to the available possible decisions) and this decision is made by the Final/Inner Cause of the free being.
So the free being is not just making decisions disregarding what has come before, as what has come before is included in the Efficient Causes. And the free being is not just acting randomly -- which would mean the actualizing of a Potential State without something already Actual involved -- because the Past & Present states of the world (meaning all precursors to a decision) are the Actual in this case.
As to why any of this matters, I'd say it gives a picture of Free Will that is in line with the way all causation has to be explained. This is my best attempt at understanding the supposed big problem facing Free Will, though I am not 100% sure exactly what problem skeptics are getting at and perhaps it only is an issue for physicalist-type views of the world...
There are varied things that need to be explained further, I'm sure, but that's a rough sketch of what Laird and I have been getting at. Ideally (pun somewhat intended) it provides some clarity as to what a "how" explanation of Free Will needs to look like in that it provides a place for the past & present states of the world & the being itself to be relevant (Efficient Causes) as well as a place for our rational faculties to intercede (Curating the decisions that we could take, which includes fatal or crazy ones, to the more rational decisions applicable in the Present Moment).
Finally, as an aside, I think this picture also shows why a Mind is arguably involved (or was involved at some point) whenever there is change. After all, is there any Possibility Selector one can think of besides the Mind? More needs to be said about the immateriality of the aforementioned Intentionality / Rationality / Subjectivity, as well as arguments for God's existence, but seeing all of physcialism's failures of explanation I do increasingly feel there is no causation that is not, in some form, mental causation.
'How can the brain be in the head if the head is in the brain?'
-- J. R. Smythies