dlorde
Philosopher
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2007
- Messages
- 6,864
Ah, you mean poorly defined. So define it.I see what your saying, I put free in italics because it is a slippery word.
I see it on a sliding scale of influence from the environment. At one end of the scale the choice is essentially deterministic with a local impression or appearance of free will. At the other end truly free will is only experienced by an omnipotent god. Every thinking entity is somewhere on this scale.
No I am not saying free = random.
So it's not deterministic and it's not random?
You seem to have said what it isn't, without saying what it is. Please define it for us, explain what you think it is, if not deterministic or random. Describe where this sliding scale goes from determinism if not to randomness. Examples would help.
'Random is imperfect' is a non-sequitur, and there is no 'sliding scale' of randomness - something is either random or it is not; Unless you mean the degree to which random events affect a process.Surely random is imperfect and on a sliding scale likewise.
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