Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Well, So Long As They Are Not Just Any Old Preferences

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This will be my last post on this subject.  In the comments to my prior post, groovamos wrote a comment that contains a personal history followed by a gut wrenching story (which is in bold):

I am in no sense as qualified as most on this thread to debate philosophy. However as one who embraced materialism TWICE in my youth, separated by a 3 year period of interest in mysticism, I’ll have a go.

At the end of sophomore year I had converted to the typical campus leftist stance of the day, cultural zeitgeist being the driver, sexual license sealing the deal. Not outwardly religious as a kid, I quickly gave up belief in a supreme being. And just as naturally I gave up any belief in ‘truth’ as something relevant to all human activity, and sure enough out the window was any belief in ‘evil’ as a concept. Soon enough I found that lying was acceptable as long as it was me doing it. Especially since I was self assured as one with a degree in a difficult discipline (hip too, self-styled). And who enjoyed hedonistic pursuits and shallow short term relationships. And lying sort of fit into the whole picture.

But here is the interesting part looking back on it. Whenever I would read in the news of acts of insane depravity and wickedness, I would go into a mentally confused state and would feel like I had no bearings in order to process what I had just encountered. It was extremely uncomfortable. I’m talking about the acts of Jeffery Dahmer, and others. One of these I remember that particularly caused me disorientation as if I, the atheist, were the one that might risk insanity just thinking about it (in the early ’80′s).

In this particular case the police arrived at a house where a man had just dismembered and sliced up his mom, her screams having been heard by neighbors. The man did not notice the police had entered and was found masturbating with a section of rectum he had excised. When asked how he had disposed of his mother’s breasts, he said “I think I ate them”.

Congrats to any atheist on here finding the story ‘unfavorable’. Congrats on your faith that someday ‘science’ will discover every event in the long chain for that experience. ‘Science’, answering all questions, will describe for you every neural, synaptic event, every action potential, every detailed cascade of chemical analogues and concentration gradients in your visual system and brain. And you will know EXACTLY the complete ‘science’ behind your disfavoring the story, so it will fit like a glove over your materialist philosophy, and maybe even reveal why the guy did it. And if you are a little disoriented, like I seriously was, you may be saved from that in future by ‘science’.

In the very next comment Mark Frank writes (Mark added the bold, not I):

The OP quotes me but omits a paragraph which I think is important. Here is the complete text:

As a materialist and subjectivist I agree with Seversky:

A ) Personal preferences can be reduced to the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of each person’s brain.

B) There is no such thing as objective good and evil.

C) Statements about good and evil are expressions of personal preferences.

(I would add the proviso that these are not any old preferences. They are altruistic preferences that are deeply seated in human nature and are supported by evidence and reasoning. They are also widely, but not universally, shared preferences so they are often not competing.)

Now, of course, the point of this entire exercise has been to demonstrate a truth, which I will illustrate by the following hypothetical dialogue between Mark and the man in groovamos’s story (let’s call him “John” for convenience):***

Mark: John, dismembering and eating your mother is evil, and by ‘evil’ I mean ‘that which I do not personally prefer as a result of impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain.”

John: But Mark, I preferred to dismember and eat my mother. Otherwise I would not have done it; no one forced me to after all. Therefore, under your own definition of good and evil it was “good,” which you tell me means ‘that which I personally prefer as a result of impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain.”

Mark: Not so fast John, I would add a proviso that my preference is not just any old preference. It is an altruistic preference that is deeply seated in human nature and is supported by evidence and reasoning. It is also widely, but not universally, shared. And your preference is none of these things.

John: Are you saying that your preference not to dismember and eat your mother, which preference resulted from the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of your brain, is objectively and demonstrably good, and that therefore my preference to dismember and eat my mother, which preference also resulted from the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain, is objectively and demonstrably evil?

Mark: Of course not. There is no such thing as objective good and evil.

John: Well at least you are being consistent, because we both know the electro-chemical system in your brain just is. And as Hume demonstrated long ago, “ought” cannot be grounded in “is.” Your preference just is. My preference just is. Neither is objectively superior to the other.

Mark: Certainly that follows from my premises.

John: You can say your preference is “good” but if good is defined as that which you prefer you are saying nothing more than “my preference is my preference.” Your little proviso, Mark, does not make your preference anything other than your preference; certainly it does not demonstrate that it is in any way more good than my preference. So, my question to you is, why do you insist on the proviso?

Mark: _____________ [I will let Mark answer that]

I will give my answer as to why Mark insists on his proviso. He has the same problem Russell did: “I cannot see how to refute the arguments for the subjectivity of ethical values, but I find myself incapable of believing that all that is wrong with wanton cruelty is that I don’t like it.” Russell on Ethics 165/Papers 11: 310–11.

Russell was incapable of believing the conclusions that followed ineluctably from his own premises. Dissonance ensued. For most people materialism requires self deception to deal with the dissonance of saying they believe something that it is not possible for a sane person to believe. Thus WJM’s dictum: “No sane person acts as if materialism is true.”

So why does Mark insist on his proviso that in the end makes absolutely zero difference to the conclusion that must follow from his premises? He is trying to cope with his dissonance.

If my premises required me to engage in acts of self-deception in order to cope with dissonance, I hope I would reexamine them.

___________
***I am not saying Mark has said or would say any of these things. I am saying that the words I put in his mouth follow from his premises. If he does not believe they do, I invite him to demonstrate why they do not

Comments
Vivid, I think part of our disagreement is in how we're using the terminology.
Pick one and give me a real life example.
I want means I like. I do what I don't want. I don't want to go to the Dentist, but I choose to go there. What I most wanted to do was sleep in, but I woke up. I chose what I don't want.
No, to most want is not the choice it is the reason, the cause for the choice. Evry effect has a cause or do you disagree with that position as well?
When the cause always produces the effect, there's no reason to separate them. In your view, what I want is always what the choice is. To understand the choice, you understand the want. The choice is nothing but the want.
It’s not that “nothing determines my choices”, but that “my choices are not determined”. So something determines your choices but then again it doesnt. Got it.
You're using the term "determine" in two different ways. To determine something is to pre-plan, direct or force it. A "determined" thing follows necessarily. Another meaning for 'determine' is 'to select'. A selection is not something that followed necessarily. When you say "choices are determined" you're mixing up two meanings. If a choice is pre-planned, then it's not a choice. That's what "determinism" means. The water flows downhill. Gravity determines that. Gravity doesn't choose to do something. To say "I determined" to choose a lemon jelly bean is a misuse of the term. I freely selected lemon. The choice was not "determined". It wasn't pre-planned. It wasn't a necessary action.
I am not arguing that they are forced in fact they are not forced. Nor do I think they are determined by gravity etc. I agree I can freely choose for any number of reasons. But I cannot choose that which I do not most want to choose otherwise I am choosing something against my will. That you cant see this baffles me. Oh well I am sure you are thinking the same about me.
Well, this is confusing since you say that you can "choose for any number of reasons, but the only reason you make a choice is because that's what you most want". You can't do both, as I see it. You've added 'going against your will". In this case, it seems you're equating "what I will" with "what I want". Again, this is a rhetorical problem. The term "to choose" means "to will". They are equivalent. To then say, "I choose whatever I will", means "I choose whatever I choose". That's not giving a reason why you choose something. It's not saying whether your choice is free or not. "I buy whatever I pay the cashier for". Well, to pay the cashier is the same as "to buy". If I want to know why you bought something, you would't say "because I paid the cashier".
Hey you are arguing for the position that you make choices against your will not me.
Again, "to choose" means "to will". To say "I always choose what I will" means, "I don't have free will because I always choose what I choose".Silver Asiatic
April 22, 2015
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FMM RE 191
What I find amazing is Vivd and I see a huge difference between our position and that of Mark Frank but both MF and SA see our views as equivalent. I find that odd and I’m not sure why it is.
Me neither. I too would be interested to hear Marks comments. Box agreed. Vividvividbleau
April 21, 2015
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IMHO freedom is about self-causation (self-determination)—opposed to being externally determined—not about being predictable or not. However if self-causation is predictable or not I'm not sure.Box
April 21, 2015
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All What I find amazing is Vivd and I see a huge difference between our position and that of Mark Frank but both MF and SA see our views as equivalent. I find that odd and I'm not sure why it is. I would like to explore the difference between self-determined choices and determination from outside us. I think that is a key difference between Mark and I. I would argue that our choices are free if they are determined by our nature and they are not free if something apart from us does the choosing. It seems pretty straightforward to me. I wonder what SA and MF think? Apparently Edwards felt that our nature is so tightly bound up with who we are that effectively our nature is us. I wonder if MF would agree? peacefifthmonarchyman
April 21, 2015
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SA
"I choose what I don't want": I choose what I don't like. I choose what I don't need. I choose what I don't feel like having. I choose what I don't desire. I choose what I'm not totally convinced of. I choose not because I want, but because someone else does. I choose what I don't have a craving for. I take a risk. I choose only what I afford, not what I want.
Pick one and give me a real life example.
Ok, as I said, this is a rhetorical trick. You’re applying an explanation after the fact. You’re equating “to choose” with “I want”.
No, to most want is not the choice it is the reason, the cause for the choice. Evry effect has a cause or do you disagree with that position as well?
It’s not that “nothing determines my choices”, but that “my choices are not determined”.
So something determines your choices but then again it doesnt. Got it.
They’re not forced on me by something else. They’re not determined by gravity or environment or genetics. When I face a choice, at that moment, I can freely choose for any number of reasons – including, “that’s the thing I don’t want”.
I am not arguing that they are forced in fact they are not forced. Nor do I think they are determined by gravity etc. I agree I can freely choose for any number of reasons. But I cannot choose that which I do not most want to choose otherwise I am choosing something against my will. That you cant see this baffles me. Oh well I am sure you are thinking the same about me.
A choice that is “determined” is what was “necessary to occur”. But I am not controlled by a force that makes it necessary for me to choose a certain outcome every time.
Hey you are arguing for the position that you make choices against your will not me.
I understand some people’s religious views are that God basically makes them do everything they do. They have no free will. They don’t really choose anything. They just do what they do – God made all the choices. So, all their choices were “determined” by God.
My argument has no need to invoke God. Vividvividbleau
April 21, 2015
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Vivid
I must say I find this really absurd “But I think we find very often we choose what we don’t want” If so thats is a real problem because if I am choosing that which I dont most want to choose then I am under some sort of compulsion which destroys any notion of free choice.
No, it's not compulsion. There are many reasons to choose one thing or another. You seem to have reduced all these reasons to "what I want". The term 'want' is not very specific, but usually it means "what I like". But there are many contradictory meanings of the word "want". I want ... I need. I like. I wished for. I think I have to have. I know is best. I feel like having. I am convinced to have. I have a craving for. I desire These are all different things. To say "I choose what I don't want" doesn't mean I have a compulsion. "I choose what I don't want": I choose what I don't like. I choose what I don't need. I choose what I don't feel like having. I choose what I don't desire. I choose what I'm not totally convinced of. I choose not because I want, but because someone else does. I choose what I don't have a craving for. I take a risk. I choose only what I afford, not what I want.
I think you are confusing competing wants with that which we most want. Of course there are competing wants. Often there is a struggle to do one thing or another. When these competing wants are equal we are undecided but once we make a choice that is a result of one want being stronger than another.
You're assuming that the choice is only with regard to "what I want". But as I point out, what we want is not the only basis for choosing something. We might not want either. We might have a self-destructive attitude. We might have a sinful attitude.
To say that I often choose that which I dont want to choose is crazy for one who advocates free will. Whats free about that?
If I had to always choose what I want, then there would be no free will. The fact that I can choose what I don't want, means that I have freedom of choice.
That in order to make a choice “I” must most want to make that choice given the options available to me at the time the choice is made. It is I who determines that choice.
Ok, as I said, this is a rhetorical trick. You're applying an explanation after the fact. You're equating "to choose" with "I want". Whatever I choose, is what I wanted. I chose something, therefore I wanted it. So, there's no choice, there's only "I wanted". But that's not how it worked. We don't evaluate every choice by thinking only about "what I want". There are many other reasons to choose one thing or another. If not, then all we would be interested in is "what I want" and that's the definition of selfishness.
I am curious are you taking the position that nothing determines your choices? Think about it. Edit: The kind of nothing I am speaking of is the something that comes from nothing kind of nothing.:)
It's not that "nothing determines my choices", but that "my choices are not determined". They're not forced on me by something else. They're not determined by gravity or environment or genetics. When I face a choice, at that moment, I can freely choose for any number of reasons - including, "that's the thing I don't want". By choosing something, it doesn't mean it was "determined". A choice that is "determined" is what was "necessary to occur". But I am not controlled by a force that makes it necessary for me to choose a certain outcome every time. I understand some people's religious views are that God basically makes them do everything they do. They have no free will. They don't really choose anything. They just do what they do - God made all the choices. So, all their choices were "determined" by God. My religious view conflicts with that. If I do something bad, it's not God who determined that I did that. I chose freely to commit a sin. In the same way, if I do something good, God didn't force me. I chose freely to do something good.Silver Asiatic
April 21, 2015
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SA You say the predictabilty of the moral act has to take into consideration the motives. Of course! And you would most certainly jump in the pool because of these very same motives. I must say I find this really absurd "But I think we find very often we choose what we don't want" If so thats is a real problem because if I am choosing that which I dont most want to choose then I am under some sort of compulsion which destroys any notion of free choice. I think you are confusing competing wants with that which we most want. Of course there are competing wants. Often there is a struggle to do one thing or another. When these competing wants are equal we are undecided but once we make a choice that is a result of one want being stronger than another. To say that I often choose that which I dont want to choose is crazy for one who advocates free will. Whats free about that? No to say we choose what we most want given the options available at the time the choice is made would mean no freedom is also absurd. It is the essence of freedom. What do I mean by self determined is this. That there is such a thing as an "I" that is immaterial. That I have competing wants and desires. That in order to make a choice "I" must most want to make that choice given the options available to me at the time the choice is made. It is I who determines that choice. I am curious are you taking the position that nothing determines your choices? Think about it. Edit: The kind of nothing I am speaking of is the something that comes from nothing kind of nothing.:) Vividvividbleau
April 21, 2015
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Vivid,
Was there a yes or no to my question regarding you jumping in the pool?
No, I didn't treat that as a yes or no question, given the context. As I explained, the predictability of the moral act has to take into consideration the motives.
What do you find objectionable to my position that my choices are self determined? That I choose what I MOST want given the options available to me at the time the choice is made?
I think you're applying an after-the-fact explanation to any decision. Whatever it is you did, you can claim later "that's what I most wanted". But that's not a basis for decision-making. Otherwise, you would say "I will always choose what I most want". In every situation, you would ask yourself "what do I most want?" and then choose that. But I think we find very often we choose what we don't want. We face a cross-road and can go one way or another. To say, "I always want to choose the good" is ok. However, we recognize that we don't always choose good - we have immoral motives at times. I'll just conclude that by saying "we don't have free will" there are lots of problems when it comes to decision-making.
If I am not choosing what I most want is this not the antithesis of free will?
No, it's what free will permits. We can choose what we most want, what we want less, or what we don't want. We're free. To necessarily choose always what we most want means every choice is based on that criteria. That would mean no free will - no freedom.
If my choices are not self determined then is this not the case as well?
Could you explain what you mean by "self determined"? How does that relate to free will? I'm not challenging, I just don't understand the distinction. The way I see it, the word "determined" means "known in advance, planned, or necessarily consequential". Water flows downhill. That is "determined" by gravity and the landscape, etc. There's no free will for water to go uphill. "Self determined" would mean that myself has no choice whenever I face a choice and I "determine" things necessarily? If you're saying "whatever I chose is what I did", therefore there is no free will - that is after the fact explanation. That's just trickery. "I can predict every decision I make. I will choose something every time I make a decision". Again, that's just rhetorical trickery. We're looking at the point of decision. Is that a free choice or not? If it is "determined" by something (materialism would say 'determined by physical processes, laws') then there's no free will. The self is the agent either making the choice, or being moved by a determining force. It's not the thing that determines anything in this matter. If the "self" can freely choose between options, and then does freely choose - that's free will.Silver Asiatic
April 21, 2015
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SA, Was there a yes or no to my question regarding you jumping in the pool? What do you find objectionable to my position that my choices are self determined? That I choose what I MOST want given the options available to me at the time the choice is made? If I am not choosing what I most want is this not the antithesis of free will? If my choices are not self determined then is this not the case as well? Vividvividbleau
April 21, 2015
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Vivid
SA it is not materialism nor evolution that explains the vultures behavior rather it is its nature to most want the meat. How it got to be a vulture or its nature is another conversation that from my perch ( pardon the pun) is not the point of the analogy.
I think what MF is saying is that your view is basically the same as the materialist view. The vulture chooses meat - there is no free will. How you explain why the vulture wants meat may be different or not, but the end result is the same.
As far as pedictability goesI think there are many choices that for me and I would venture to say for you as well that are predictable, even certain. If an infant is drowning in a swimming pool I most certainly know I am jumping in how about you?
To say that our choices are predictable is not to say that we can predict some events. It means that we don't have a choice - like the vulture with meat, or the rabbit with lettuce. To say we can predict some acts is one thing, but as I said, could I predict my motive or attitude in any situation? Beyond that, each day we face moral challenges - smaller or greater. I will suggest that none of us acts in a perfectly moral manner every day, even if we want to. Why? In my view, we make free choices. Sometimes we choose good and other times not as good. This is far from predictable. Keep in mind, it's not just jumping in the water to save an infant (an extreme case that 99% of us never face). But it's the motive and attitude. Am I doing a heroic act because: 1. I will look like a hero on TV? 2. My girlfriend will think I'm great? 3. I'm afraid of looking like a coward? 4. I'm afraid of going to hell if I don't? 5. I love the baby? 6. I want to obey God, even though I don't want to jump? 7. I am an expert life-saver and this is easy? 8. I might be able to kidnap the baby? There are dozens more motives that change the moral quality of the very same act. It's not me predicting what you will do -- it's you predicting what your moral attitude will be in any given situation (or me predicting mine). We have the freedom to choose our behavior and our motive. That's how we improve our moral character. By making better, free choices. We measure our acts against a moral standard. If there was no free will, there's no learning. We just do what we do. That's the same as materialism. An organism just does what it is in its nature to do. If there was no free will, there would be no reason to praise a heroic act either. But we do praise such acts because we know they were made freely - often, going against what nature would determine.Silver Asiatic
April 21, 2015
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MF RE 179 I think as a materialist "predictable" may mean something different in your world view than what it means to me. As a materialist it would seem that not only are your choices "predictable" but they could not be otherwise because they are matter determined. I think my choices are not matter determined rather self determined. I could choose otherwise if I "most wanted" to do so. It is not matter that produces "predictability" it is my nature that produces "consistincy". Vividvividbleau
April 21, 2015
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SA RE 182 SA it is not materialism nor evolution that explains the vultures behavior rather it is its nature to most want the meat. How it got to be a vulture or its nature is another conversation that from my perch ( pardon the pun) is not the point of the analogy. As far as pedictability goesI think there are many choices that for me and I would venture to say for you as well that are predictable, even certain. If an infant is drowning in a swimming pool I most certainly know I am jumping in how about you? Vividvividbleau
April 21, 2015
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MF - I should have read the other comments on the thread and I would have known that. As I see it, your view and that of VB and 5MM are basically the same. Materialism can explain why the vulture chooses meat (if one accepts the evolutionary explanation) and the rabbit chooses lettuce. There's no free will involved. To me, this would mean there's no real moral choice in any case. Organisms just do things according to their nature.Silver Asiatic
April 21, 2015
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SA #180 Sorry. I just realised it isn't you. It is vividbleau and 5MM who, I think, maintain our choices are proper choices in the normal sense of the word even though they are predictable from our nature.Mark Frank
April 21, 2015
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No, I don't believe our choices are predictable. Choices come with motives and reasons. I think we face choices in life and we are free to select from options. The choice is not determined by nature or physical process or environment. I also differ from 5MM's view on whether unregenerate people have free will. I believe every person does have free will. Materialism cannot generate that kind of freedom since all actions are determined by natural causes. In my view of free will, the agent can act against what natural processes alone would determine (or be possible of achieving).Silver Asiatic
April 21, 2015
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Obviously I am most interested from a compatibilism point of view. It seems (although I am still not sure) that both of you accept the idea that our choices are proper choices in the normal sense of the word even though they are predictable from our nature (the vulture analogy). This is the essence of compatibilism. Choosing is something we do which is the result of our natures plus the environment we are in. Whether our natures are material or otherwise is a separate issue.Mark Frank
April 21, 2015
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5MM I had the same kind of questions as MF did in 171. It seems like you're saying that those who are not regenerated do not have free will. Only people who are regenerated have free will - right? MF asked:
Was there a time when were not regenerated and therefore did not have free will? If so, did you notice a difference in the way you made choices after you became regenerated?
I think people will say that they have a new freedom to choose when they are regenerated. But I'd be confused about the idea that non-regenerated people do not have free will. I think what it might be is that all the actions are freely chosen - what to eat, when to take a walk, what to watch on tv ... but the ultimate purpose and value of the acts is locked in. So, no matter what you do, it's always a sin. So, you have no free will because you're always choosing the very same thing. Again, I very much disagree with that (with a different religious perspective), but that would be easier for me to understand. When you're unregenerated, you don't have any free will. Every act is a sin. When you're generated, you now can do something good. So, you have freedom to choose between two options. Good or sin. I have never thought about that before and I just made it up right now.Silver Asiatic
April 21, 2015
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Hey vividbleau, Edwards is the man!!! I find it amazing how current his thinking is. He anticipated so much of modern philosophy it is not even funny. I am right now reading "The Theological Philosophy of Jonathan Edwards" by Sang Hyun Lee. It is mind blowing. MF asks, Was there a time when were not regenerated and therefore did not have free will? If so, did you notice a difference in the way you made choices after you became regenerated? I say, Yes there was a time before when I was in bondage to selfishness and I notice a huge difference now. Back then all my choices were made with an eye toward my individual happiness and I liked it that way. Now I find that I naturally want to do what Christ wants me to do. It's not as if I do moral things with an eye to what's in it for me. I really genuinely want what he want's It is as if a new center of consciousness has taken over my body. Stuff I used to find desirable now are repugnant and things that I used to find lame are intriguing and I can't get enough of them. This transformation began quite suddenly a long time ago but it is ongoing. Often even now little areas of my old selfish nature that are not quite dead are miraculously brought to mind and extinguished by no power of my own. It's like a virus of virtue has taken over my body and is in the process of killing the old despicable me. He is still around lurking in the dark corners but now I find him to be an unwelcome intruder and I want him totally gone. My choices are still constrained by my nature but now I have a new nature that is free from the bounds that once held me. This personal ongoing spiritual transformation is one of the reasons I could never be a materialist. Hope that helps peacefifthmonarchyman
April 21, 2015
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MF said. The major difference is that as a materialist I think our “nature” is material and the result of evolution. I say, Now you are getting it. The materialist believes that our choices are determined by something outside of us "evolution" in this case. We on the other hand believe that our will is determined by the core of who we are. Now the only way that our views would be similar is if you hold that our individual consciousnesses is an illusion and we are in fact nothing more than mater in motion. So as I said a while ago this is really all about the nature of the self not freewill. peacefifthmonarchyman
April 21, 2015
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This is a really crude analogy but picture a hungry vulture with a head of lettuce to its right and a piece of meat to its left. What will the vulture choose? Is it free to choose the lettuce if that is what it most desires, that is is there anything external to its nature that prevents it from eating the lettuce? No its free to choose the lettuce if that is what it most desires but it will never desire the lettuce and always choose the meat because that is its nature.
This is quite a nice description of compatabilism. The major difference is that as a materialist I think our "nature" is material and the result of evolution. But the relationship between what we desire and what we choose is exactly that of compatibilism.Mark Frank
April 20, 2015
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MF RE 172 What is this free will we dont have? I dont know since I think it is impossible to have a non determined will. What would it be like if we had it? Choices would be non determined. Vividvividbleau
April 20, 2015
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MF RE 172 FYI I dont like the term free will for two reasons. 1) I dont think we have free will and 2) it causes confusion because I think people mean by that term is more accurately stated by using the term free choice. That which is determined is not free. My will is determined. "I" am the determiner. To say it another way my choices are self determined. Would you agree that if the will is determined it is not free from that which determines it? As to your question in 171 to FMM. It is not that the regenerate now has free will when before they did not have it. In neither case does that change. What changes is that with a new nature my most wants change because my nature has changed. This is a really crude analogy but picture a hungry vulture with a head of lettuce to its right and a piece of meat to its left. What will the vulture choose? Is it free to choose the lettuce if that is what it most desires, that is is there anything external to its nature that prevents it from eating the lettuce? No its free to choose the lettuce if that is what it most desires but it will never desire the lettuce and always choose the meat because that is its nature. But what if you could somehow put a new nature into the vulture, the nature of a rabbit. Now the vulture will choose the lettuce. Because of the new nature there are different desires and "most wants" Now instead of freely choosing the meat the vulture freely chooses the lettuce. Hope that helps some. To be regenerate is to have a new nature. This new nature has different most wants than the unregenerate nature. When your most wants change so do your choices. Vividvividbleau
April 20, 2015
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VB #169 Delighted you are adding to my education but I must admit I am struggling a bit with your comment. You write:
The term free will in many ways is a classic oxymoron ,at best the will is almost free ‘sort of like the Monty Python scene where the person was almost dead. What most people mean I think when they talk about free will is really the assertion that we have free choice, two very disticnt things IMO. I do not think there is such a thing as free will but there is such a thing as free choice.
What is this Free Will that we don't have? What would it be like to have it?Mark Frank
April 20, 2015
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5MM Forgive me being a bit literal about this but it is all rather confusing.
On the contrary when a person is regenerated his will is released from the bondage of sin. That is a big part of what Christ came to accomplish.
Do I understand you have free will because you are regenerated but those of us who have not been regenerated have the illusion of free will? Was there a time when were not regenerated and therefore did not have free will? If so, did you notice a difference in the way you made choices after you became regenerated?Mark Frank
April 20, 2015
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FMM RE 162 Excellent reading list. Have both in my library. Luther can be tough to get through but easier than John Owen :). Always surprised to learn how many Christians dont know of Luthers Bondage of The Will. As he wrote to Erasmus it is the "hinge upon which all else turns" I would add to your list Edwards "Freedom of the Will" Vividvividbleau
April 20, 2015
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MF RE 161 Since FMM's position is the same as mine I would like to take a stab at this if you dont mind. If you do just let me know and I will go back to lurker status :) The term free will in many ways is a classic oxymoron ,at best the will is almost free 'sort of like the Monty Python scene where the person was almost dead. What most people mean I think when they talk about free will is really the assertion that we have free choice, two very disticnt things IMO. I do not think there is such a thing as free will but there is such a thing as free choice. I am free to choose whatever it is that I most want to choose given the options available to me at the time the choice is made. But if there is an "I" then it is I that is determining my choice. My choices are determined by me and therefore my will is not free from me. From a Christian stand point neither is my will free from God nor from my fallen nature. To quote Augustine "non posse non peccare" Fallen man is "not able not to sin" So much for free will from the Christian theological perspective. Vividvividbleau
April 20, 2015
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Silver Asiatic says, I’m going to guess there is some kind of middle ground or nuanced answer to the problem. I say, Christians from Paul onward have wrestled with reconciling God's sovereignty with human responsibility and freedom. On the fringes you have hyper-calvinists who sound a lot like MF when they talk about these things and Open-theists who hold that even God's plans must accede to the absolute freedom of his creatures. Most Christians fall somewhere in the middle. I'm a Calvinist. That would be the orthodox but right wing of the issue on the left wing you have Arminianism. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arminianism Christians who give this topic any systematic thought generally choose one of those two options. peacefifthmonarchyman
April 20, 2015
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MF asks Interesting stuff but I am still not clear. Would you say we have free will now or the illusion of free will? I say, I would say the natural man's will is free in the sense that his will is not constrained by forces outside himself. He is not free however to choose to do something that is contrary to his nature. The sad fact is that after the fall human nature is always inclined to selfishness and rebellion and the natural man simply chooses actions that correspond to that nature. There is no illusion here but there is no freedom either. MF says, If this is true then presumably 5MM believes he has no free will. I say, On the contrary when a person is regenerated his will is released from the bondage of sin. That is a big part of what Christ came to accomplish. quote: Jesus answered them, "Truly, truly, I say to you, everyone who practices sin is a slave to sin. The slave does not remain in the house forever; the son remains forever. So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed. (Joh 8:34-36) end quote: peacefifthmonarchyman
April 20, 2015
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MF I'm going to guess there is some kind of middle ground or nuanced answer to the problem. But I will look forward to 5MM's reply. I'm a Christian but I'm not well-informed about that particular point of view.Silver Asiatic
April 20, 2015
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SA If this is true then presumably 5MM believes he has no free will. I am interested to know what he thinks he is missing out on. MarkMark Frank
April 20, 2015
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