Universal determinism down to the neural level does not exist and therefore doesn't prohibit free will. Why are so many physicists and other materialists wrong about there being no free will? At the neural molecular level research has shown that brain processes are not deterministic at all. There is a good new article on this in Aeon.
(From https://aeon.co/essays/heres-why-so-many...-free-will):
It's interesting that the writer dances around but doesn't really address the mystery of exactly how "downward causation from the psychological to the physical levels" can happen, especially without the mind ultimately being nonmaterial. In other words he doesn't want to really engage with the Hard Problem.
(This post was last modified: 2020-06-13, 07:25 PM by nbtruthman.)
(From https://aeon.co/essays/heres-why-so-many...-free-will):
Quote:"Let’s....take the deterministic view seriously. It implies that the words of every book ever written – the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Das Kapital, the Harry Potter series – were encoded into the initial state of the Universe, whatever that was. No logical thinking by a human played a causal role in the specific words of these books: they were determined by physics alone.
It’s unclear how any words could have been encoded into the Universe, which led to apparently random fluctuations at the time when matter and radiation decoupled from each other. How would they have been represented in those fluctuations? It’s virtually impossible that they could have affected the detailed brain-state of the authors when they wrote their books. The issue of quantum uncertainty adds another layer of implausibility to these claims. But let’s set all these major issues aside for now. Let’s suppose it is indeed possible that present-day brain-states are determined by initial conditions in the Universe, because causally deterministic physics underlies all.
The problem then is, how did all those words get there? Was there a demiurge who coded all that stuff into the detailed initial state of the Universe? It’s certainly not there in the Schrödinger equation per se, or in a randomly determined set of fluctuations in the early Universe as is normally envisaged in cosmological studies. By definition, they don’t encode either any detailed information or any logical argumentation.
So how could that data have got there? Not just for one book, but for all the books ever written? Is that really a believable story, or some kind of creationist myth?
Genuine mental functioning and the ability to make decisions in a rational way is a far more persuasive explanation of how books get written. That this is possible is due to the extraordinary hierarchical structure of our brain and its functioning. And that functioning is enabled by downward causation from the psychological to the physical levels, with outcomes at the physics level determined by constraints that change over time. No violation of physical laws need occur.
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If you seriously believe that fundamental forces leave no space for free will, then it’s impossible for us to genuinely make choices as moral beings. We wouldn’t be accountable in any meaningful way for our reactions to global climate change, child trafficking or viral pandemics. The underlying physics would in reality be governing our behaviour, and responsibility wouldn’t enter into the picture.
That’s a devastating conclusion. We can be grateful it’s not true."
It's interesting that the writer dances around but doesn't really address the mystery of exactly how "downward causation from the psychological to the physical levels" can happen, especially without the mind ultimately being nonmaterial. In other words he doesn't want to really engage with the Hard Problem.