chewybrian wrote: ↑June 30th, 2018, 10:08 amA will not free is not a will at all, so I don't understand the distinction. Any act fully caused by instinct and environmental pressures is not a free act, and labeling it as such can't change the fact. Putting the controls in my hand while the plane is on autopilot does not make me a pilot. And how is freedom of action not sufficient for accountability, and how does one have freedom of action if one's will is not free to determine the course of the action?
Freedom of action is not the same as
freedom of volition. Your will is unfree in the sense that you cannot freely choose or determine your wants or desires. Through introspection and self-reflection you can find out what you really want or desire, but you cannot freely create your wants or desires.
chewybrian wrote: ↑June 30th, 2018, 10:08 amYou can decide to desire that things happen as they happen, and remove much anger, anxiety and disappointment from your life. You can learn to limit your desires and aversions to those things inside your control, so that you can get what you want, and avoid what you don't. You can find great freedom in reconstructing your view of the world, of others and of events in this rational way. You *CAN* choose what you want or desire. I've done it, and others have done it.
No, you haven't, because you can't. You just cannot freely choose your wants or desires (including your meta-wants and meta-desires).
A free agent…
1. can do what s/he wants to do.
2. can refrain from doing what s/he wants to do.
3. can do what s/he doesn't want to do.
4. can refrain from doing what s/he doesn't want to do.
But s/he cannot freely choose her/his wants (desires).
For instance, if you want to play football, you can freely decide
to do so or
not to do so; but you cannot freely decide
to want to do so or
not to want to do so.
chewybrian wrote: ↑June 30th, 2018, 10:08 amNo leap of faith or acceptance of any irrational position is required to take this journey, unless you don't think you have a will to form in the first place. Anyone who takes that stance misses a great opportunity to improve themselves and live in tranquility instead of turmoil. Your attitude, desires, aversions, opinions, and interpretations of events are truly the only things which are always in your control. You are not only wrong, but precisely, completely and tragically wrong. You are carrying out the most extreme case of "Emperor's New Clothes" imaginable, jettisoning the only things of true value and permanent usefulness you possess in favor of an abstract, unproven theory of no value.
The degree of your self-control is itself something that you haven't freely chosen—it's given to you! The strength of your ability to change yourself, your capacity for self-enhancement/-improvement, your ability to change your attitudes, beliefs, or habits are themselves factors that you haven't freely chosen—they're given to you! Your willpower, your intelligence and your capacity for learning are all factors which you haven't freely chosen—they are given to you!
There are always (past or present) factors which heteronomously determine or influence your mind and your behavior that haven't (and couldn't have) been autonomously determined or influenced by you.