chewybrian wrote: ↑June 28th, 2018, 11:09 amConsul wrote: ↑June 28th, 2018, 10:28 amNow you're talking like a compatibilist!...Note that to deny incompatibilist libertarian free will is not to deny compatibilist free will!
I see what you are saying, but the stumbling block is that if the will is fully physical, then it seems it would be bound by all the laws relating to physical things, which seems to make it an effect of prior causes, and therefore not free. So, how can I accept materialism and not deny free will? If I experience my will as free, and choose to acknowledge it as such, then do I not need to deny materialism to do so? Where is the compelling argument for compatiblism?
First of all,
"'[f]ree will' is the conventional name of a topic that is best discussed without reference to the will. Its central questions are 'What is it to act (or choose) freely?', and 'What is it to be morally responsible for one's actions (or choices)?' These two questions are closely connected, for freedom of action is necessary for moral responsibility, even if it is not sufficient."
("Free Will," by Galen Strawson. In
The Shorter Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, edited by Edward Craig, 286-294. London: Routledge, 2005. p. 286)
So the question is: if any, which sort of freedom of action or choice/decision is compatible with materialism? And this question presupposes an answer to the question of the relationship between materialism and determinism.
Obviously,
compatibilism is compatible with deterministic materialism, and its adherents argue that compatibilist freedom is freedom enough. What's the point in desiring "superfreedom"?
"For hundreds of years it has been thought by some philosophers, and not by others, that determinism in the natural world is incompatible with freedom of the will. If everything that happens in the world is causally determined by what went on before, then one's actions, in particular, being events in the world, are causally determined from time immemorial, and there is no scope for freedom of action. I count myself among the others. One is free, in the ordinary sense of the term, when one does as one likes or sees fit; and this is not altered by the fact, if fact it be, that what one likes or sees fit has had its causes. The notion that determinism precludes freedom is easily accounted for. If one's choices are determined by prior events, and ultimately by forces outside oneself, then how can one choose otherwise? Very well, one cannot. But freedom to choose to do otherwise than one likes or sees fit would be a sordid boon."
(Quine, W. V.
Quiddities: An Intermittently Philosophical Dictionary. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1987. pp. 69-70)
chewybrian wrote: ↑June 28th, 2018, 10:28 amConsul wrote: ↑June 28th, 2018, 10:28 amThe claim is only that people cannot be supposed to change themselves in such a way as to be or become ultimately responsible for the way they are, and hence for their actions. One can put the point by saying that in the final analysis the way you are is, in every last detail, a matter of luck – good or bad." – G. Strawson
Where, then, is the line to be drawn, where we have enough responsibility to be accountable? How can he concede we are able to change, yet deny we have a responsibility to try to change, if it could benefit us or society to do so? How does he reconcile a certain level of control with zero level of responsibility? This conclusion makes no sense.
To say that nobody is
ultimately morally responsible for her/his actions is not to say that nobody is morally responsible for them
at all, and that any form of blame or punishment is morally wrong. However, I concede that it's not easy to answer the question as to what kinds of blame or punishment are morally right and justified if there is no ultimate moral responsibility (owing to the nonexistence of libertarian free will).
"The free will problem is like a carousel. One starts with the Compatibilist position . . . But it cannot satisfy our intuitions about moral responsibility . . . So it seems that an Incompatibilist and indeed Libertarian account of free will is needed, according to which free will requires the falsity of determinism . . . But any such account immediately triggers the Pessimists’ objection that indeterministic occurrences cannot possibly contribute to moral responsibility . . . For one can hardly be supposed to be more truly morally responsible for one’s choices and actions or character if indeterministic or random occurrences have played a part in their causation than if they have not played such a part . . . But what this shows is that the Incompatibilists’ "ultimate" moral responsibility is obviously impossible . . . But that means that we should return to Compatibilism, since it is the best we can do . . . But Compatibilism cannot possibly satisfy our intuitions about moral responsibility . . .
…
It seems the only freedom that we can have is Compatibilist freedom. If - since - that is not enough for ultimate responsibility, we cannot have ultimate responsibility."
—Galen Strawson:
https://www.naturalism.org/philosophy/f ... everything
chewybrian wrote: ↑June 28th, 2018, 11:09 amConsul wrote: ↑June 28th, 2018, 10:28 amThe strength of your will(power) or your motivation to change the way you are is itself something that you haven't freely chosen; it's given to you.
Again this seems contrived. You concede that someone has the power to change, but only that power thrust upon them by forces of nature outside their control? My will expressed is merely an expression of my total lack of will, because it suits your intended conclusion?
No, my point is that "free will" is a misnomer insofar as you cannot freely choose what you want or desire. Your wants and desires are just there in your mind, where you find them ready-made. Of course, there can also be meta-wants and meta-desires, such as the desire not to have the desire to drink alcohol; but these aren't freely chosen by you either. It hasn't ever been up to you to decide whether your will (to change) is strong or weak. Nobody has ever chosen to be strong-willed or weak-willed, and whether or not a person manages to overcome her/his weakness of will is itself something depending on factors and circumstances that aren't determined by her/him.
Libertarian free (superfree) will is a subjective illusion, because all your mental dispositions and attitudes, all your preferences and interests, all your wants and desires, all your choices and decisions, and all your actions are determined or influenced by certain heteronomous factors or circumstances beyond your control. And if nobody can be ultimately
causally responsible for the way s/he is, nobody can be ultimately
morally responsible for what s/he does. (Yes, this includes even Hitler and Stalin.)