| | My friend, Tibor Machan, wrote: "I am not sure when Rand offered up her definition of man as "a being of volitional consciousness," but it is certainly implicit in everything she has been writing since AS in which she tells us, via Galt, that instead of "I think, therefore I am," "I am, therefore I will think" should be accepted as a sound philosophical motto."
I would expand upon this (thus ruining Galt's neat, succinct twist on Descartes) as: "I am a rational being, and I desire to live according to my nature's requirements, therefore I will think." To me, volition is not "I could have done otherwise than I did, period," but "I could have done otherwise than I did, if I had chosen to." In other words, I hold not with (what appears to be) Rand's (and Peikoff's) categorical model of volition, but instead with a conditional model of volition -- and for much the same reasons that I hold not with Kant's categorical model of ethics ("you should do such and such, just because"), but instead with Rand's conditional model of ethics ("you should do such and such, if you want such and such a result").
I try to consistently eschew the quasi-religious "just because, period" approach to both the nature of ethics and the nature of volition. That is where I think the debate should begin.
Tibor again: "This, as well as her ethical stance that states that we ought to attend to the world with our minds, which is a matter of choice, pretty much puts her on the free will side of the debate. ("Ought" implies "can".)"
But is it, "we ought to attend to the world with our minds, period," or "we ought to attend to the world with our minds, if we want to live successfully (be happy, etc.)"? If we more strongly desire to live successfully &c than to do something else, and we understand that doing so requires that we attend to the world with our minds, and that we can freely do so, then -- barring disease or coercion, etc. -- we will do so. That is the respect in which our free choice to focus is determined by our values.
That is why I am a compatibilist. Rather than trying to fit the round peg of categorical volition in the square hold of determinism, I instead equate conditional volition very specifically with value determinism. I honestly don't see how people can operate as self-determining beings otherwise.
Tibor again: "Free will is required also in her epistemology, since the formation of concepts is never automatic but something everyone must initiate."
No argument here. All living beings initiate the actions that result in their survival. Human beings are able to initiate not only metabolic and physical actions, but also actions of their consciousness. But it is not their consciousnesses or minds or wills that initiate those actions. It is those human beings!
Tibor again: "I suppose we can engage in a quarrel about what is primary, what is not in Objectivism, but in such an ethically pregnant philosophy as Rand's, free will cannot be dropped--too much else depends on this human capacity."
I understand that many people do not see how ethics is possible without categorical free will, and believe that "freedom to choose, just because" is a necessary condition of ethics. But if there is not some superior value determining one's choice in a given context, then one's choice is arbitrary and thus devoid of moral worth (isn't it?). I see ethics as Rand does, as a code of values guiding the actions of one's life. But it tells you what are the necessary conditions to your living and being happy -- what you must do if you want to live successfully and be happy, and the "if" has primacy here. If you didn't want those things, where would be the motivating power behind the "ought"?
That is why I reject both Kantian categorical ethics and Randian categorical volition, and why I further believe that Randian categorical volition implies Kantian categorical ethics. (Yes, Rand's and Peikoff's view of volition as categorical undercuts their view of ethics as conditional.)
Tibor again: "In both of [my own two books, The Pseudo-Science of B. F. Skinner (1974) and Initiative--Human Agency and Society (2000)], I address the effort to combine any bona fide ethics with any determinism of the sort that renders "could have done otherwise, all things being equal other than the agent's act of initiative," impossible."
Well, what motivated "the agent's act of initiative"? Isn't it the fact that, at that point in time, despite whatever "official" values he might espouse, he actually valued doing what he did more than what he didn't do? How is initiative incompatible with value determinism? In my view, our values -- which often shift in their relative weighting to one another -- are the only possible explanation for our choices of action.
Tibor again: "(Nor is it kosher to put in an aside about how volition is something mystical, without argument. Given its ontological base in the fact of multiple types of causes in nature, a la Aristotle and Joseph, Rand sure as heck didn't construe volition mystical!)"
"Could have done otherwise, period," is mystical as construed by Rand and Peikoff. It is categorical volition, which is tantamount to unexplained whim. The parallel to Kant's mystical, intrinsicist categorical view of ethics is inescapable -- and the antidote is the same as Rand's this-worldly, objective, conditional view of ethics. That is, I am arguing that Objectivism should properly embrace conditional volition, "could have done otherwise, if I had desired and chosen differently than I did."
Tibor again: "Finally, the issue really isn't whether one is or is not a bona fide Objectivists but whether the Objectivist, Randian idea that human beings are beings of volitional consciousness is true."
I do not quarrel with the idea that human beings are volitional. I just want to strip away the mystical, intrinsicist, arbitrary element of "freedom to choose, just because." There ain't no such animal!
Best to all, REB
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