Brainache, I would like to address some points of one of your posts, and then put my 2 cents in about why it matters.
I get the feeling that the "i" is a product of the various different components of the brain having to average out a lot of different inputs.
If I was aware of all the inputs at once I would be paralised not knowing what to react to and what to ignore. Some kind of filter is needed to make sense of it all.
The fact that this filter creates the illusion of free will or the fact that this filter actually has free will is irrelevant.
When we talk about the mind as the product of brain activity, we have to be very careful with our terms and make sure we're describing what's actually going on. Of course, given the early stage of research we're at, there are a lot of gaps in our understanding, so we must be careful to be up front about these and not fill them in with concepts from previous debunked models.
And to my eye, there's some theoretical Bond-o in your assessment here which bears scrutiny.
"Averaging out inputs" does not appear to be a function of the brain. Rather, it's more accurate (tho still somewhat metaphorical, but I don't object to that as long as we know what we're up to) to say that the "input" is "routed" (it flows via neural pathways to distinct brain regions/structures) and "processed". Some input is stored, some of it "dies" (that is, it leaves no discernable lasting impression). Some of it -- in a highly "processed" form -- becomes, we could say, available to the conscious self, or known to the "i".
Yes, threshold values are an important concept in understanding the activity of the neural network, but on a macro level, inputs aren't "averaged out". We could compare it (with the strong caution that this is highly metaphorical and dangerously homuncular) to secretaries and office managers in the front office of a CEO's suite deciding which people, postal mail, and email is forwarded to the boss, and whether certain data is passed on as-is or must be summarized into reports.
The paralysis (again, metaphorical) you refer to is certainly genuine. When the brain's pre-conscious/co-conscious structures and processes don't do their job in adequately processing and routing the input, the result can be a barrage of stimulus, absent emotional cues which help us prioritize, that has the effect of making all stimuli emotionally equivalent. This is the permanent condition of a few unfortunate people, and a temporary experience undergone by many at various times.
In fact, this may be an important phenomenon to scrutinize when trying to answer the question of whether the i is capable, under normal circumstances, of actually generating or pushing further stimulus back into the loop.
But even though a malfunction (or maladaptive functioning) of the routing/processing/associative "modules" of the brain can result in this kind of choice-paralysis, I don't think it's warranted to say that the "filter has free will" (or potentially could have it), although it might be meaningful to say that the illusion of free will is generated in part by the filtering apparatus of the brain.
If anything has free will, I think it can only be the experienced self, the i. I think that's what universally understood by the term "free will".
As far as relevance, it may be irrelevant in the sense that you personally aren't interested in the topic, but it's certainly relevant to an understanding of the brain and the nature of the experienced self which we all intuitively feel to be "us", even though certainly an understanding of what's real doesn't change what's real.
Whether or not the particular shape of the neurone structures within my skull determine what kind of choices I make is beyond my control. They might be different choices if my brain had different structures, or chemicals in there, or different neurons firing in different sequences.
I can't see how that means I am somehow forced to choose coke instead of pepsi.
You're right. The question of free will isn't answered by the fact that different brains do different things. It's certainly correct that, just because I would almost definitely live a very different life if certain brain structures regulating emotions were more "normal" in my head than they are, it does not follow that the choices I actually make are somehow "forced".
The issue is whether the activity of these structures -- in any brain at all -- is solely responsible for choice, with the felt experience of "I did that" being a post-fact illusion, or whether the emergent "i" is an active component in the process.
I think the complex stucture of the brain allows many solutions to any given problem and our memories and experiences influence which solution we chose in any given situation.
If I accept that I have no free will, what is the point of doing anything?
I must act as if I have free will. There is no other way to make it through the day.
Well, I'm not a philosopher or scientists either, but I can tell you why it matters to me.
The bottom line, however unsatisfying, is that it matters to me because I feel like it does.
Reading Skinner's "Beyond Freedom and Dignity" as a kid had a profound effect on me, because it challenged my notion of, if not who I was, then certainly what I was. It changed my life. And for years afterward, my reading in cognitive science and my college courses in the subject all were colored by Skinner's ideas, the questions he raised, and the questions I had about both.
Personally, I don't think there is a point to doing anything, whether we have free will or not. But still, I wake up every morning, and I either kill myself or I get on with what needs to be done. So far, it's been the latter.
And maybe that's why it matters to me. When the normal human motivations -- family, God, social aspiration -- are unimportant to a person, there's very little left to care about. Trying to crack as much of the code of this world as I can, to understand as much as possible about myself and what's happening around me, is just about the only thing that gives me any sense of purpose and direction at all.
And in the end, I think a clearer understanding of reality helps me (and all of us) make better decisions, whether or not the "i" is doing the deciding, or is just along for the ride.