Bluegill
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2002
- Messages
- 1,243
One night during my senior year of high school, I stayed up late working on a paper about Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-5. Fueled by instant coffee and sugar cookies, I lapsed into a long period of comtemplating the nature of free will.
I finally reached the conclusion that there is no such thing as free will, but that since the world behaves exactly as if we DO get to make choices, then it's better to just accept the notion that we have free will.
I don't know if I can repeat my thought processes from that night without spending several more sleepless days studying Tralfamadorians and sci-fi concepts of four-dimensionality. Ugggh. But I think I was right, anyway.
Another note: We were discussing free will in a college class once, and our professor brought up some famous person's argument in favor of free will. According to this argument, picture a hungry mule in a field. There are piles of hay on opposite sides of the mule, each the exact same distance away. Also, the piles of hay are exactly alike. There is no way whatsoever to distinguish one pile of hay from another, and therefore there is no way to decide which pile of hay to go to for food.
It's absurd, according to this argument, to think that the mule, with no way of making a decision about which way to go, would stand there and starve. He would use free will to decide to go in one direction or the other, eat, and keep from starving to death.
But I disagree with this argument. With no way of making a decision, how do we know that the mule wouldn't stand there and starve?
I suspect that "free will" is just another way of saying that the inevitable, complex series of causes that provoke a response in the human brain are beyond our ability to grasp.
I finally reached the conclusion that there is no such thing as free will, but that since the world behaves exactly as if we DO get to make choices, then it's better to just accept the notion that we have free will.
I don't know if I can repeat my thought processes from that night without spending several more sleepless days studying Tralfamadorians and sci-fi concepts of four-dimensionality. Ugggh. But I think I was right, anyway.
Another note: We were discussing free will in a college class once, and our professor brought up some famous person's argument in favor of free will. According to this argument, picture a hungry mule in a field. There are piles of hay on opposite sides of the mule, each the exact same distance away. Also, the piles of hay are exactly alike. There is no way whatsoever to distinguish one pile of hay from another, and therefore there is no way to decide which pile of hay to go to for food.
It's absurd, according to this argument, to think that the mule, with no way of making a decision about which way to go, would stand there and starve. He would use free will to decide to go in one direction or the other, eat, and keep from starving to death.
But I disagree with this argument. With no way of making a decision, how do we know that the mule wouldn't stand there and starve?
I suspect that "free will" is just another way of saying that the inevitable, complex series of causes that provoke a response in the human brain are beyond our ability to grasp.