I had, previously, supported romantic notions of free will but after spending some time researching this topic for essays at Univ, I became slowly more and more horrified by the arguments put forward by the mechanists because, well, they simply made more sense. Mechanist arguments boil down to describing human 'choices' as being wholly governed by a brain that is simply an extremely complex electrochemical machine. We have no 'mind'. What we think of as 'thought' is a byproduct of electrical and chemical reactions to stimuli.
If this is true and if one were able to know the electrical and chemical state of the human body and brain and if one were able to know the electrical and chemical thresholds required, throughout the body and brain, for various reactions to take place - then one could exactly predict the action of that person given certain stimuli. i.e. their action could be pre-determined.
Of course, given our current abilities, you'd have to be God to know this and to know the thresholds of stimuli but this doesn't detract from fact that it could be predetermined...
Like I say, I want to believe in Free Will but the mechanists have the most compelling arguments. I'm happy to dig some of this stuff out the bookshelf if you want some more info.
S'ok, we're working from the same basis here - I _want_ to believe in Free Will in the same way I want to believe in an afterlife and in magic. The world would be a more interesting place to me, and less scary in many ways if I could believe in them.
no subject
I had, previously, supported romantic notions of free will but after spending some time researching this topic for essays at Univ, I became slowly more and more horrified by the arguments put forward by the mechanists because, well, they simply made more sense. Mechanist arguments boil down to describing human 'choices' as being wholly governed by a brain that is simply an extremely complex electrochemical machine. We have no 'mind'. What we think of as 'thought' is a byproduct of electrical and chemical reactions to stimuli.
If this is true and if one were able to know the electrical and chemical state of the human body and brain and if one were able to know the electrical and chemical thresholds required, throughout the body and brain, for various reactions to take place - then one could exactly predict the action of that person given certain stimuli. i.e. their action could be pre-determined.
Of course, given our current abilities, you'd have to be God to know this and to know the thresholds of stimuli but this doesn't detract from fact that it could be predetermined...
Like I say, I want to believe in Free Will but the mechanists have the most compelling arguments. I'm happy to dig some of this stuff out the bookshelf if you want some more info.
no subject