by EminemBase » Sep 27th, '12, 17:11
Okay so, in regards to the idea of 'free will'...
I haven't studied the particular theories regarding the question within philosophy much, though I am aware of the general lines of reasoning. But I have sort of, inadvertently studied the idea through other science as I've watched quite a few lectures and done a lot of listening and thinking in regards to the genetic structure and functioning of the brain, and how humans operate in general.
Aside from that, I have tended to think about this question a lot in my spare time; it just tends to naturally pop into my mind all the time as I often notice instances in which the apparent free will is not as it seems, and so I tend to dissect actions and try and figure it all out.
In short: I think the conclusion that I've come to (at least for now) is that free will is a pretty spectacular illusion mostly fronted by consciousness. I think consciousness and awareness of self and one's own thoughts gives the impression that you are creating or controlling those thoughts, when in reality it's more like an observation; an observation of self, you're watching yourself run.
On the face of it, saying that it's an illusion may seem a little unsatisfying to the average person when you think of the mountains upon mountains of choices you're faced with and 'choose' on a daily basis; but I think the truth is, you DO have choices, and ARE making them, but you're not making the choices on a conscious level, no more than a computer reacting to a virus chooses to react. I think that our analytical bases and awareness of choice and computation are so staggeringly complex and beautifully evolved that we have this 'LIVE' feeling...
I know that still, many reading this will be almost, angered by the notion that 'they' aren't controlling what they do but what I think is that the conscious us and ego and all of our emotions tying us into 'self' are bothered by the realization that they aren't, fully, in charge. I mean, we are in charge in the sense... we all have unique genetic structures and circumstances which lead to unique choices, it's just that we make our choices before we know we've made them. So we aren't truly consciously choosing, as we'd like to think. And we control nothing outside of ourselves.
There was actually a test done whereby they monitored this guy's brain and asked him to pick a colour, out of like two choices; and, they knew which colour he had picked (on the MRI machine) BEFORE (six seconds prior!) he was consciously aware of what he wanted to choose.
So I think evidence such as that shows what I mean; although a choice is being made, the 'us' we think of as us aka the conscious us, isn't making it. It's simply becoming aware of the choice that has been made, before 'we' are aware of it. So free will as we think of it, is an illusion.
Then you have to take in to account the fact that... we don't truly have infinite choices or freedom as we're all tailored in a certain way. Our genes, and our unique brain structures, and our upbringings and our surroundings (ALL outside of our control) heavily influence the people we become and therefore heavily influence the types of choices we'd even veer towards. All of these things and more things outside of our control set a pathway of limited choice paths with different outcomes (of which we can't see beyond maybe, a few steps; which in themselves can be easily outlandishly incorrect, corrupted or changed by new changes to circumstance etc. etc.) which shape our personal realities, perceptions and continue to influence our choices, opinions and so on.
So, we do have choices but, I think not as much choice as we'd like to think. And it's not that choice is a total illusion; just that conscious choice is a total illusion, and the idea of having limitless paths or total freedom, is an illusion, all fronted by consciousness. I think the truth is that we choose before we know we've chosen, and then become aware of the choice, and feel that is free will.