yy2bggggs
Master Poster
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2007
- Messages
- 2,435
That sounds needlessly complex. It's also causal (retrocausality is causal).I think the actor loads the quantum dice. That's why I suggested free will has to involve retrocausality.
It also seems to simply sweep the problem under the hood of complexity, and to me at least, it's not complicated enough to make it go away. Essentially, if I could initiate retrocausal processes, what it would look like is that some time would pass, then I would make a decision (which you allege is a causal thing), and then afterwards I would make that decision be the thing that I did. I cannot change what I did in the past, however... I can only possibly sit and regret decisions that I have made, so I at least have no powers of revision.
However, we don't live in an instant, but more of a "smear" of time--the very short term time it takes to perceive things, assemble them in our minds, etc. That does legitimately provide some opportunity for your retrocausal processes to occur, given certain... liberties (no pun intended) taken with the mechanics. So that could allow me to retrocausally commit actions. The problem with this, however, is that the retrocausality of the situation solves no problem. It's just ordinary causality, extended in space-time a tad. It's still A resulting B... the only difference is T(B)<T(A). There's nothing particularly significant about that--no new capabilities are added when compared to T(A)<T(B). So there's nothing that retrocausality would actually do in that smear that ordinary forwards in time causality can't.
Finally, there's a strange physical limitation to quantum mechanics. For all of the tunneling you get to do, for all of the faster-than-c stuff that is fundamentally happening, there's one suspiciously consistent law that seems to never, ever be violated... information cannot travel backwards in time. The implication of this is that there seems to be no retrocausality to be found in quantum mechanics. So even if you want to appeal to QM, and slip retrocausality in, you need to invent the mechanism within QM. It's just not there.