A couple of things here: In regards to general determinism, there's no reason you would feel like you were being led by deterministic forces, because that's not how the brain is wired. The human perception is basically an extremely specialised system of stimulus and response. A whole load of IF->THEN rules that drive behaviour, because the universe being deterministic doesn't mean it is expedient for biological organisms to evolve to predict chaotic (too difficult to understand) trends that it may be a part of.Kanastrous wrote:It appears to me that, when I wake up thirsty, it's the free exercise of my will to stand, go to the kitchen, and draw a glass of water to drink. Or to tolerate being thirsty, in order to stay warm under the covers.
It does not appear to me that I am being marionetted around by some form of predetermination, in the process.
Your perception itself is as much a part of the system as chemical reactions or gravity. When you walk everywhere, you just accept gravity as the norm, you don't feel like your movement is being determined by gravitational factors, when in truth, it actually is to an enormous extent. Likewise, this applies to everything, internal and external.
In regards to more general and understandable examples of your body forcing your choice; try holding your breath for a couple of minutes. As you withhold more from your biology, your body screams at you with building intensity to take a different course of action till eventually it becomes exceptionally difficult to ignore.
Name one thing you did that was not a reducible to a result of preceding events? We're all products of our environment since we are never distinct from it.Sure, I can imagine that all of my actions and decisions have been predetermined, and I'm just running on tracks, but where's the evidence to suggest that?
There's also the rather crazy idea I had once, where I imagined the future to be as consistent as the past and therefore no more changable. Our understandings of the future are changable (thus we may define certain things as "potential"), but in the future, after the coin has been tossed, it will only have one outcome, and that outcome was reducible entirely to the finite amount of contituant parts that led up to it. This view did not sit well with my intuitive brain, however, so I try not to think along those lines, but unless there's something I'm missing, it still makes (some) sense.
It's a metaphysical position, really, not one that can really be distinguished based on evidence. Unless you count weird quantum shit that seems to "know" what it's doing before it does it, but I'm not qualified to argue that.Whereas at least I have a form of evidence that I act according to my own will, in that memory lets me follow the sequence on actions and/or inputs and/or decisions, that apparently led me to choose to perform one series of actions instead of another.
What's unquantifiable about all future events being the logical consequences of constant, unthinking nature? Frankly, yours assumes some part distinct from the rest of reality and not subject to all-encompassing natural progress. Some sort of acausal homunculus that chooses (i.e causes) things "by definition". I find that less palatable with what the rest of the universe has hinted at, let alone what behavioural psychology et al have hinted at.Anyway, it appears to me that Occam's Razor suggests that I want to perform a given action because I anticipate desirable consequences is a simpler solution than there's some invisible, unquantifiable dimension to reality which predetermines my actions while allowing me to perceive them as consequences of my own will.
It's not. Then again, 2000 year old zombies shouldn't be informing people on who is deserving of civil rights, so the world is mad enough to entertain such questions. Of course, it's not like a stardestroyer vs a mole of defiants is really relevant to day to day life. They're thought experiments and entertainment.I'm sure questions like "do we have free will" are big-time popular with philosophers. I just don't see how they're relevant to day-to-day life.