tlb wrote:Although those are interesting topics, they are separate from the question of Free Will. We might want to rationalize and defend our decisions (particularly if they turn out to have bad results) no matter what the process was that served to chose them. But those justifications do not prove that we only had a single way to choose.
No, they're not separate from the question of what, if anything, free will is.
The problem is this: we know that what we regard as "consciousness", the little voice that represents our thoughts, is not representative of the entirety of human cognition. It is one part of a greater whole - and not even that authoritative a part as it believes itself to be. There are many pre-conscious things happening at all times in our minds, and if our conscious brain notices them, it will more often than not engage in a process of ex-post-facto justification.
While composing this post, my fingers are moving in rhythm with the music I'm listening to while waiting for the part of me that composes these posts to determine which letters to enter next. When my fingers move, they do not follow precise commands - once upon a time, I had to look at my keyboard to direct my fingers to the precise keys I need to press to make an "e" happen, nowadays all of that is skipped so that it feels like there's a direct connection between me and the keyboard.
This is the result of preconscious processes taking over from the conscious side of things by recalling learned behaviours - if my keyboard shifts slightly to the side, all my typing is going to be off until I notice and correct it.
The crux of the argument here is this: How much of our daily behaviours are governed in this preconscious manner? Lived experience suggests that there is quite a lot of it - When I drive to work in the morning, I sometimes catch myself wondering what happened in the past couple minutes, because a preconscious process in my brain has decided to not record a full memory of that timespan given that nothing important happened. Was I truly conscious during that time? Did I truly make any decisions? I must have, for riding a bike does involve quite a few decision points, but ... was
I ever involved in them?
And going beyond that: How many things do we decide every day without fully thinking everything through? I am currently reviewing applications for a job we're hiring for, and a lot of the judgments I come to are based on snap decisions - decisions I can fully justify of course, given our procedures and standards, but again: How much was
I actually involved here?
At any of these points, there were choices presented and decisions made. Even for things that I fully decide based on long deliberation, the decision I am making is always going to be the decision
I was going to make, based on the various factors involved. Were I to redo the decision process, I would likely come to the same conclusion unless something happens that would materially change the outcome.
Is there "free will"? I don't think so. In the absence of a metaphysical layer, everything I do boils down to electrochemical reactions in my central nervous system, reactions that at their basis are completely deterministic. Can an entirely deterministic system (like what our brains are) produce non-deterministic results? Could a
Laplacian demon exist?
Quantum physics says it can't, that there is a boundary beyond which we can only operate in probabilities, but to me that suggests that there is a completely deterministic system present there, but that we do not have a complete mapping of all the influences going into it.