Well, "cellular automation" could fit as an analogy. (You could think of our universe itself as a cellular automation with a very complex set of rules.)
If you define an automation as something capable of autonomous action, but lacking free will, the real question is what do you
mean by free will?
Free from
what, exactly? The laws of cause and effect? External influence? In that's the case, then
nobody has free will.
My personal concept of free-will has the following requirements...
1. A crude understanding of how your environment/world behaves.
2. A some idea of what actions you are capable of, and the likely results of making these actions.
3. Desires. (Whether Innate/hereditary, environmentally influenced, or intellectually determined.)
4. Capacity to choose our actions based on achieving our desires.
No intangible soul required.
By the way, calling cellular automata "incredibly complex" might be fine in the context of an unprogrammed graphics (or mathematical models, or whatever), but they are certainly not on par with the incredible complexity of the human mind, right?
Wikipedia said:
From a theoretical point of view, it is interesting because it has the power of a universal Turing machine: that is, anything that can be computed algorithmically can be computed within Conway's Game of Life.
If the human mind could be (theoretically) simulated by a computer, then yes, even the simplest cellular automation could be that complex. Hell, with the power of a universal Turing machine, it could emulate a computer powerful enough to simulate the entire universe, everything and and everyone in it included. (Of course, you'd have to build a computer powerful enough to run a cellular automation large enough to do this first.)
