Moderator: Only_Humean
Moreno wrote; My point is that we do not know if consciousness has any affect in the organism or is merely an epiphenomenon. It seems like choices are made before the conscious mind is even aware a choice has been made.
There is no reason to assume it is more than a witness. Of course choices are made by the body and they are 'watched' by the witness which is really a quale.
You're really claiming to control your experience? Do you control or are you even aware of the processes that allow you to read this sentence and understand it's in English? Of course not. Do you control the way air vibrates and ultimately becomes what we know as sound? No. You also don't control your thoughts.
I agree that it is an important part. And I never denied that consciousness affects things. The only thing I'm arguing is that at no point does the self come into the equation. Or free will, obviously.
I definitely agree that consciousness is a function of the brain, I just don't think I would say that it centralizes anything. As far as what are the evolutionary advantages of consciousness, there are some theories out there. I think I can find you some interesting links to read if you want. I might have to read them as well.
As far as other animals go, I have no idea honestly but just the other day I was reading about how animal's mental activity has to be completely different given that they don't have language. A hungry cat doesn't think " A bit of fish now would be awesome". He just gets up and eats.
Again, I don't know what the experiencer is. To me, it makes much more sense to talk about processes or consciousness.
BUFFALO wrote:
still feel that free will is (in some ways) compatible with determinism.
And although I think science has made it obvious that this is an illusion, if we expand our definition of "self" to include the brain and body and all it contains and has experienced, we can still see ourselves as conscious agents;
Sam Harris believes it is ultimately a better strategy to see free will as an illusion, because there are certain consequences (eg. for moral reasoning) that are aided by the realization that who we are is causally determined.
quetzalcoatl wrote:
Imagine that the brain is like a switchboard, how is it operated?…
a. signals derived of external sources operate the switches?
b. consciousness is the physical [or other] subjective aspect of the brain, which operates the switches?
c. both a and b.
If b or c then consciousness must have an effect on evolution!
I am claiming that consciousness is the mechanism which controls the experience, but not what informs it! Note that here I am not saying that consciousness is something other than part of the machine.
The consciousness is the only thing which can understand information,
Lets just throw the self out of the window here. Free will however is different, it isn’t entire, the non selecting aspects of the brain can act alone, but the consciousness can select options too, so there are both parties at work here. The self isn’t fundamental to free will, its just a mechanism of worldly and societal interaction, a tool that consciousness uses.
Twins for example can have very similar personas/selfs.
I’d say consciousness is the aspect of the brain which centralises ~ there must be something doing that for cohesive purposes, our minds would be a mess otherwise.
There are massive advantages, but I am not just talking about being fit, I think just ‘being’ conscious gives a further need to be fit and survive.
Hmm well I saw a documentary where sealions and walruses, took logic tests involving food rewards for changing sets of symbols. They out performed some humans! Dogs and dolphins take linguistic instruction from us, birds make music when their chirping is slowed down. One example showed a bird a small segment of Beethoven’s 9th. Dogs with smells millions of times stronger than ours probably have an associated language in their minds.
I agree - it does not matter if there is a random component; this does not restore or bestow free will in any fashion. What I am saying is that, in my interpretation, it may be valid to redefine free will such that it is compatible with determinism. And a number of people, like Dennett have essentially done just that. I mean, most of my decisions are "up to me" in the sense that they are unrestrained by external factors (I am not under duress) - they are still determined by my personal likes/dislikes/preferences/conditioning etc. etc., but they are mine. And although they are determined, they are not "predetermined" i.e. until I make them nobody (not even me) knows what I will choose. That's about as free as things can get.volchok wrote:BUFFALO wrote: still feel that free will is (in some ways) compatible with determinism.
That point is moot. Free will is a a logical impossibility regardless of the universe being deterministic or ramdom.
I know where you are coming from here (why not just face the facts, right?) but I'm not sure I would call Dennett (or the other compatibilists) stupid. I can alter or modify the workings of my body including my brain. You yourself have expressed an interest in bodybuilding if I remember correctly. Certainly here is avenue for changing our bodies and how they function, essentially by using our brains. And the brain itself can be modified by meditation. But it is still all subject to determinism, i.e. there is a complicated causal chain (more like a web) of antecedent events.volchok wrote:BUFFALO wrote: And although I think science has made it obvious that this is an illusion, if we expand our definition of "self" to include the brain and body and all it contains and has experienced, we can still see ourselves as conscious agents;
I hate that holistic you can have your cake and eat it too bullshit kind of argument. It's beyond stupid. I think Dennet subscribes to it although I'm not sure.
One can expand the notion of self as much as one wants but here's why it's a nonsensical argument: You're no more responsible for the workings of your brain as you are for your heart beating or the production of testosterone in your body or the number of red cells you have in your blood. Your liver is part of your body and yet no one would hold you accountable if it stopped functioning properly and no one would argue that you control your liver.
Again I agree that he really does believe it is an illusion and I have heard a talk where he specifically addressed Dennett's take on free will as being simply a redefinition. And then he specifically stated that he thinks it healthier to accept the fact that we do not have free will, because it can make us more compassionate. I'll look for the video or essay or whatever it was.volchok wrote:Harris does believe that free will is an illusion. It's not some sort of tactic to make us more moral.BUFFALO wrote: Sam Harris believes it is ultimately a better strategy to see free will as an illusion, because there are certain consequences (eg. for moral reasoning) that are aided by the realization that who we are is causally determined.
volchok wrote:As we all know, we do not control the physical configuration of your brains.
volchok wrote:One can expand the notion of self as much as one wants but here's why it's a nonsensical argument: You're no more responsible for the workings of your brain as you are for your heart beating or the production of testosterone in your body or the number of red cells you have in your blood.

BUFFALO wrote: I agree - it does not matter if there is a random component; this does not restore or bestow free will in any fashion. What I am saying is that, in my interpretation, it may be valid to redefine free will such that it is compatible with determinism. And a number of people, like Dennett have essentially done just that. I mean, most of my decisions are "up to me" in the sense that they are unrestrained by external factors (I am not under duress) - they are still determined by my personal likes/dislikes/preferences/conditioning etc. etc., but they are mine. And although they are determined, they are not "predetermined" i.e. until I make them nobody (not even me) knows what I will choose. That's about as free as things can get.
Certainly here is avenue for changing our bodies and how they function, essentially by using our brains. And the brain itself can be modified by meditation. But it is still all subject to determinism, i.e. there is a complicated causal chain (more like a web) of antecedent events.
Again I agree that he really does believe it is an illusion and I have heard a talk where he specifically addressed Dennett's take on free will as being simply a redefinition. And then he specifically stated that he thinks it healthier to accept the fact that we do not have free will, because it can make us more compassionate. I'll look for the video or essay or whatever it was.
Fixed Cross wrote:But since you said that the self is an illusion, this might read: "that which does not exist does not control the physical configuration of the brain belonging to that which does not exist".
So the larger point being that testosterone changes decisions, and this is significant, but what caused the presence of testosterone and the system in which it has the capacity to influence decisions? Exactly - "you", "The Self" - the irreducible "complex of drives" as a cause of which chemicals can be identified as fulfilling a function at all.
Only_Humean wrote:
I can't affect your liver function with all the social pressure I can bring to bear (excluding maybe extreme psychological stress or execution) . I can affect your behaviour more or less, though, so you are held responsible for your behaviour.
This might strike people raised with a Christian free-will moral ethic as unfair or uncompassionate, but I don't see what that has to do with anything.

volchok wrote:Only_Humean wrote:
I can't affect your liver function with all the social pressure I can bring to bear (excluding maybe extreme psychological stress or execution) . I can affect your behaviour more or less, though, so you are held responsible for your behaviour.
This might strike people raised with a Christian free-will moral ethic as unfair or uncompassionate, but I don't see what that has to do with anything.
I don't understand your point.

volchok wrote:Only_Humean wrote:How is that last sentence not fatalistic?
From naturalism.org:
Fatalism holds that the natural world causes events in human life but is not itself influenced by human will or behavior. No matter what you do, the same things will happen to you. The fatalist position is that "if I do not have free will, then my life is totally determined by the outside world, therefore my beliefs and desires have no effect on the outside world, and therefore no matter what I do the same things will happen to me". Of course, it is empirically demonstrable that our behavior affects the environment and thus what happens to us.
If you want to read further: http://www.naturalism.org/fatalism.htm# ... lism%C2%A0

Only_Humean wrote:Hmmm.volchok wrote:Only_Humean wrote:I can't affect your liver function with all the social pressure I can bring to bear (excluding maybe extreme psychological stress or execution) . I can affect your behaviour more or less, though, so you are held responsible for your behaviour.
This might strike people raised with a Christian free-will moral ethic as unfair or uncompassionate, but I don't see what that has to do with anything.
I don't understand your point.
I'll try it this way:
1) Why should we become more compassionate as a result of seeing free will as an illusion?
2) Given that we either will or not do so, depending on our mental states, dispositions, history and genetics (etc), why would it be important for you to make any such claim?
It may seem a bit nonsensical or tangential put this way, but I'm trying to work out the responsibility thing.
BUFFALO wrote:And just because things operate deterministically doesn't mean that we are not agents or that our ideas carry no weight or influence - realizing that others are not necessarily free to "not commit" atrocities can influence the way we respond. It could make us more compassionate.

Only_Humean wrote:BUFFALO wrote:And just because things operate deterministically doesn't mean that we are not agents or that our ideas carry no weight or influence - realizing that others are not necessarily free to "not commit" atrocities can influence the way we respond. It could make us more compassionate.
So we should stop asking - no, insisting - that people not do certain things. Because either they will or they won't.
- Of course we should insist, as that is part of what influences whether they will or they won't.
So what if it's something really nasty, and they do it even though we insist they don't?
- Then we should up the punishment stakes to make the deterrent influence greater.
But they can't be held responsible for the acts they commit!
- And I can't be held responsible for being an uncompassionate bastard.![]()
volchok wrote:BUFFALO wrote: I agree - it does not matter if there is a random component; this does not restore or bestow free will in any fashion. What I am saying is that, in my interpretation, it may be valid to redefine free will such that it is compatible with determinism. And a number of people, like Dennett have essentially done just that. I mean, most of my decisions are "up to me" in the sense that they are unrestrained by external factors (I am not under duress) - they are still determined by my personal likes/dislikes/preferences/conditioning etc. etc., but they are mine. And although they are determined, they are not "predetermined" i.e. until I make them nobody (not even me) knows what I will choose. That's about as free as things can get.
Well, yes we do have that. But that is not free will. That is usually described as "Freedom to act". I think it's intellectually dishonest to redefine things like that. It´s an impediment to clear thinking and intellectual discourse really.
volchok wrote:I wouldn't call Dennet stupid. His argument is stupid.BUFFALO wrote: Certainly here is avenue for changing our bodies and how they function, essentially by using our brains. And the brain itself can be modified by meditation. But it is still all subject to determinism, i.e. there is a complicated causal chain (more like a web) of antecedent events.
Yes, it is possible to change your body, or your brain. But again, wanting to do so is a mental state in itself that doesn't just happen in vacuum.
It reminds me of when I'm thinking about free will. Suddenly a thought occurs, and I recognize that I didn't control that thought, it just emerged. And then I notice that me recognizing that I did not control that thought is just another thought which I also didn't control. See where I'm getting at?
I wasn't sure where I had seen it, but I should have know it would be in an obvious place.volchok wrote:It does make us more compassionate.BUFFALO wrote: Again I agree that he really does believe it is an illusion and I have heard a talk where he specifically addressed Dennett's take on free will as being simply a redefinition. And then he specifically stated that he thinks it healthier to accept the fact that we do not have free will, because it can make us more compassionate. I'll look for the video or essay or whatever it was.
This is it: http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/free ... -free-will
Only_Humean wrote:
Hmmm.
I'll try it this way:
1) Why should we become more compassionate as a result of seeing free will as an illusion?
2) Given that we either will or not do so, depending on our mental states, dispositions, history and genetics (etc), why would it be important for you to make any such claim?
Interesting distinction; everything is foreordained in either case, but fatalism assumes free will.
Only_Humean wrote:
So we should stop asking - no, insisting - that people not do certain things. Because either they will or they won't.
- Of course we should insist, as that is part of what influences whether they will or they won't.
So what if it's something really nasty, and they do it even though we insist they don't?
- Then we should up the punishment stakes to make the deterrent influence greater.
But they can't be held responsible for the acts they commit!
- And I can't be held responsible for being an uncompassionate bastard.
BUFFALO wrote:I agree that there is a certain dishonesty here that needs to be excised. But any attempt to refute free will, in my opinion, will have to address the powerful underlying subjective experience that we have of being in control. I think we confuse our genuine "Freedom to Act" with a popular romanticized (if you will) interpretation that converts it into this "ghost in the machine" type of free will where we see the self as something that stands quite apart from our bodies; this "immortal soul" that has a supernatural capacity to devine good and bad is ultimately responsible for the choices we make. But the fundamental "sense" of freedom is difficult to avoid and I think it is genuine, in a limited way.
And I don't think our positions on this are very far apart.
I indeed do see what you are getting at and you are doing a pretty good job of describing one of the fundamental problems: most of the time we have no choice whatever what pops into our heads. Now the argument can be made that we can, and often do, tell our minds what to think about, and this is true enough.
.I wasn't sure where I had seen it, but I should have know it would be in an obvious place
volchok wrote:iambiguous wrote:
So, when a tiger chooses to kill a wild boar that's the same thing as a hunter choosing to kill a tiger? Which is the same thing as someone from PETA choosing to express outrage at this?
The same thing in regards to what?
If you mean complexity, clearly it isn't.
iambiguous wrote:
But is the consideration of the hunter and the animal rights activist really nothing other than a more complex interaction of the matter that interacts in the brain of the tiger responding [more or less mechanically] to feelings of hunger?
volchok wrote:iambiguous wrote:
But is the consideration of the hunter and the animal rights activist really nothing other than a more complex interaction of the matter that interacts in the brain of the tiger responding [more or less mechanically] to feelings of hunger?
Yes. Although a human brain is much more complex then the brain of a tiger.
You argument seems to go a little something like this : We have rational thought and we make decisions therefor free will exists.
I don't think I need to point out how ridiculous that is.
volchok wrote:The reason why we become more compassionate once we realize that free will is an illusion is because we then understand that no one could act different then they did and if we were in their shoes( identical body, brain chemistry, mental states, dispositions, genetics and so forth) we would have acted exactly the same way.
Notice that they have no control over any of the aforementioned things. Once you understand this hate becomes irrational. Even hating Hitler is irrational. Natural, yes. But irrational. Vengeance looses all it's meaning and so does retributive justice. In some cases, some small form of retributive justice might still be moral but this are rare cases.
As far as why it's important to make this claim, the problem here is that you're making the same mistake you did when you asked how could determinism not be fatalistic ? While it is true that things are determined, our bodies are also composed of atoms like everything else. You are part of nature therefor your actions have consequences.
Interesting distinction; everything is foreordained in either case, but fatalism assumes free will.
No. Fatalism assumes that we are not causal agents.
volchok wrote:Yes they can´t be held responsible but we still have to deter certain behaviors. Why ? Because everyone else will be better off. We need not entertain any notions of free will to understand this. We can, and should, be honest about it.

Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot]