It's impossible to answer those questions without begging the question. I haven't "forgotten" the other possiblity. I'm perfectly aware of it. I just don't happen to believe it is true.
Huh ? How can you NOT believe in determinism ? It's not something you can believe or disbelieve, it is one of only two logical possibilities.
You are trying to claim that there is some sort of logical, necessary reason why his act must be fully determined by previous states.
I am saying that the necessary reason is one of two logical possibilities.
That is what you believe.
No, it isn't. This is what I've been telling you for a while, now. Belief has NOTHING to do with it. It is one of two and only two logical options.
All you are doing is repeating your assertion that you don't believe in free will
LFW is logically impossible. My beliefs have nothing to do with it.
and trying to claim you are doing so for logical reasons. There is no logic to support your view. You just don't happen to believe in originatory free will.
That is false. So far, your attempts to explain your belief has fallen into the two possibilities I have mentioned. Therefore it is quite obvious that you accept them, as well.
Yes there are, it could be an originatory act of will. How many times do we have to go around this loop?
It could also be a Poofan Illan Rus! But inventing stuff doesn't make it true. What the hell if an "originatory act" of whatever ?
If an act is "informed" (which is a way of saying "influenced" and, therefore "caused") then it is deterministic. Otherwise, since there are NO causes for the act, it is necessarily random. I dare you to find any one on this planet who can describe a third possibility.
No it isn't, it is an act.
Irrelevant. An act is either caused by deterministic factors or it is random.
Your whole position depends on begging the question. You start off with an implicit assumption that there's no such thing as originatory free will then end up coming to what you think is a logically necessary conclusion that there is no such thing as originatory free will.
UE, you simply do not understand the logic involved here.
This is a "P" and "Not P" situation. There IS NO third option. It's not even a question of following from premises. We're not even at the point of forming an argument. There simply isn't any other option. And again, I DARE you to find a third. So far you've simply stated that you think there is, but your descriptions always fall into "P" or "Not P".
You are asking the question within the context of your own belief system, which denies the possiblity of free will.
I honestly don't care what you think I believe. If you can't answer the question, then just say that it's an irrational belief of yours and we'll be done.
I can never answer your question in a way that would satisfy you because your own belief system neccesarily makes it impossible for you to understand the answer I am giving you.
Unsupported assertion. You haven't even tried. You refuse to go even further because you
think I can't accept it ? What a wonderful debater you must be!
You want me to explain how free will works. I can't.
There's a good reason for that.
All I can do is ask you to consult your own subjective experiences.
My subjective experiences are unreliable, as are yours. But were I to do as you ask, I'd still say this: All the actions I undertake are wholly determined by previous states. I don't see why that's a problem.
If you do that and still don't know what I mean by "free will" then there's nothing I can say which will change your mind.
It's unfortunate that you think that way. If that's how I went around forming opinions, I would never accept quantum mechanics or relativity because I can't quite grasp the concepts. But I can and do accept them because I can understand the objective confirmations of the theory.
However, every time you say that it is logically impossible for free will to exist I will reply by saying that your belief is dependent on a metaphysical assumption, not logic. Logic can only work on the assumptions you feed into it, and you are feeding in the assumption "everything is either completely determined or completely random."
I refer you to the "P" and "Not P" thing above. If something is caused, then the cause determines the outcome. If it isn't determined, then there is no way to know what the outcome will be and, whatever the nature of the act, it will be indistinguishable from randomness. Ergo, it IS random.
Instead of starting with the assumption it's impossible, start by assuming it is possible.
I'm not starting with it. It's simply obvious. In fact, it's the very same basic logic that makes us accept that "something exists".
Put it another way: How do you know that everything is either completely determined or completely random???
I never said it was either completely one or the other. It could very well be some of one and some of the other, though in the end, if it's even partially random, then the outcome in some of those cases will be impossible to determine e.g. random.