Free Will, Do You Have It?
by Albertus Kral
When people make choices and we ask why, it strongly suggests that we believe there must be a reason for the choice made. It also suggests that we do not easily believe that the choice was simply made because the person wanted to make that specific choice without any reason at all. When we ask another person why, it opens a controversy because we believe we can make any choice we want. Most of us believe we have free will to do so. We should simply accept that the other person made the choice because they wanted it. That should be the end of the conversation; however, it seldom is. Why do we need a reason? Can’t we just accept that people make choices for no reason at all? After all, is that not the essence of free will? Free will does not require an explanation nor a reason, it means that the choices we make are free from any influences and are made without any reason. Yet we have a difficult time accepting that something is done for no reason at all.(Location 131 of Kindle version)
Seemingly this is not an idea the author created all alone. Even Schopenhauer and Einstein had similar kind of thoughts.
Man does at all times only what he wills, and yet he does this necessarily. But this is because he already is what he wills.Schopenhauer - Chapter 5 of On the Freedom of the Will
A man can do as he will, but not will as he will.Albert Einstein - My View of the World (1931)
What do all these sayings imply? Do we have free will, or not? Is it merely our inability to express the reason behind our actions in words, or do we just behave in a pre-planned, pre-determined manner, which is a result of our brain processes due to various reasons which are out of our control? Are we unable to will what we will, for real?
– William James