All you've done is name a behavior. You just said "I chose to post this" and defined free will as "saying I chose to do this". You haven't actually learned anything from this. To actually probe deeply (and learn something) you have to define the word "chose". If you just define it as "what I do that I call choose" you're just chasing your tail.nin wrote:Free will: The ability to choose between two or more options.
If people have ever chosen anything then free will “exists” by definition. So have you ever chosen something?
Violence has nothing to do with this. According to "free will" the person with a gun to their head can choose to either do what you say (not risk death) or oppose you (risk death).nin wrote:yes, i have. The free in "free will" can confuse, but it has nothing to do with freedom. Freedom is when you are free to choose without the threat of violence. If you go with the definition that i gave earlier, then i have free will whenever i can choose more than one option.Grey Cloud wrote:If I hold a gun to your head in order to make you change your mind, have you exercised your free will?
In a more general sense, I think you can argue that, one does not need to exercise free will continually, to have free will. If one has the capability of choice, then one has free will. Hmmm maybe i should have included that in my definition.
That's awfully specio-centric of you. I'd even argue that there is no such thing as a living entity that cannot understand concepts. I mean, what life-form can get by without understanding up, down, hunger, etc.?nin wrote:yes, Animals can't understand concepts, only humans can do that.
I think wiki does a decent job.Grey Cloud wrote: I think that you are in the minority with that one. The subject of free will has exercised the world's greatest minds for several thousand years (at least).
A slighly more sophisticated definition than yours:
I think this boils down to a person responding to the following hypothetical situation:
Let's assume we could "build a human" from scratch and subject it to a specific, perfectly controlled environment. At the end of a specified interval we ask it a simple question such as "Would you like to leave the room?" We record the answer and repeat this, over and over and over and over...
The question is, will we get the same answer to the question every time? A determinist might, without much thought, simply state "yes". A non-determinist might, without much thought, simply state "no". An individual who thinks a moment will quickly realize that this situation is not actually realizable. We cannot rewind back and perform the experiment again identically, but instead must perform them serially. If we perform them in parallel it is also impossible to subject them to the same environment because they would have to occupy the exact same location. The individual raises this objection. Now the scenario is that we do this experiment (either in series or parallel) and get the actual data, something like 1500 yes and 10 no, or maybe 755 yes and 755 no, or maybe 1510 yes and 0 no. If it's not the latter, the crucial question becomes,"How do YOU explain the difference?" The determinist (and scientist) explains it as minor differences in the environments each test subject was subjected to which were not accounted for, i.e. s/he explains it in terms of physical causal phenomena that escaped our notice. The non-determinist (and non-scientist) explains it as "free will", stating that the minor fluctuations the determinist refers to aren't enough to cause such a large difference, and that the difference would still be there *if* all the situations were identical.
The reason I call them scientist vs. non-scientist is because the former will immediately look for specific causes to explain the different results. The latter will not. If the latter does look for specific causes for the difference, then s/he is saying that there was a specific cause outside free will, and is trying to explain the difference (what scientists do).
Your definition does not result in any meaningful conclusion. Free will (i.e. choice) = A single, specific state A results in more than one other state, i.e. a cause can have more than one effect and an effect can have more than one cause. We can use this definition consistently. Now when we perform an experiment where we attempt to set up state "A" to get expected result "X", then if we don't get the result "X" we can attribute it to free will instead of looking for a physical causal explanation.nin wrote: This is just a more complicated and unscientific definition. You can’t use that definition consistently.
Who cares if you can say the words "I chose to do this" and then call it free will? That doesn't tell us anything.nin wrote:I know a lot of great minds don’t believe in free will, but that is irrelevant. Free will exists by definition.
This assertion is ludicrous. Although animals have not demonstrated what humans think of as "intelligence" in every area and to the extent that humans have, they have demonstrated AN ability in almost every conceivable area. It is arguable that many "lesser life forms" are in fact a good deal better than humans at various activities involving conceptualization.nin wrote:Yeah. Animals can’t understand concepts. They still feel emotions, but they don’t understand intellectual concepts.
Humans are just experts at abstract conceptualization, i.e. pursuing thought purely for thought's sake with no concrete referent. Even that, there's not really any proof that other animals don't do it, we just assume they would have used this kind of abstract thinking to do things like build stuff that we did.
In your view, nin, I think you need not show why animals "understand concepts". I think you need to show that humans donin wrote:That is correct. But even if there was such an exception...that doesn't mean that gorillas, in general, understand concepts. Even if we said that all monkeys, gourillas and dolphins understood concepts, there would still be alot of animals that didn't. And bacteria (which is alive) wouldn't understand concepts either.
"The issue is not whether machines think, but whether men do"
-B.F. Skinner
Is certainly an applicable quote for you, replacing "machines" with "animals".