| | Joe wrote, Bill, you say necessity and compulsion are different. Compulsion overrides someone's will. Are you simply saying that a person doesn't have a will, and so it can't be overridden? No, that's not what I'm saying. Why would I now say something like that, when I've been saying all along that people choose their actions based on their value judgments? Why would I now say that they DON'T choose their actions -- that they DON'T have a will? A person is "compelled" to do something only when he couldn't have chosen the alternative even if he had wanted to. I am "compelled" to give the government my money, because I couldn't have kept it even if I had wanted to. If I vote for Bidinotto, because I've decided that he is the best candidate, that doesn't mean that my decision "compels" me to vote for him, the reason being that I could have voted for the other candidate, if I had decided that he was the better of the two. If the government forces me to vote for Bidinotto, then my vote is compelled, because I couldn't have voted for the other guy, even if I had preferred him to Bidinotto. Note that if I say that my choice to vote for Bidinotto is necessitated by my value judgments, I'm NOT saying that I couldn't have voted for the other candidate even if I had preferred him to Bidinotto. Do you see the difference? Necessity in this context does not mean the same thing as compulsion. Now one problem with responding line by line is that you missed the point of an entire paragraph because you broke it up and answered outside the context. You present an example of a person who has absolutely convinced himself that there is only one reasonable choice, feels it strongly, and has no other possible motivation to choose anything else. I pointed out that the example is worthless and proves nothing. What it proves is that he can still be said to make a "choice" even though it was clearly necessitated by his value judgments. We're wasting time here. You brought up this example of the stars aligning because you admitted that you can't define a person's values until after they chose, and were looking for an example that is so overwhelming[ly] in favor of a particular alternative that it would define their values accurately. What example of "the stars aligning"? I didn't use that metaphor, so I'm not sure what you're referring to? In any case, a person's choices are a reflection of his values. As Rand puts it, "A value is that which one acts to gain and/or keep." Or as Nathaniel Branden says, "A value is an object of an action." I reject this method because it avoids defining "value" by having every conceivable motivation for acting be aimed at a single alternative. Instead of more rigorously defining your term, you've created the kind of situation where your term doesn't need a definition. Why do you say that? And where value determinism should be able to make predictions, the only cases you can hope to safely predict is one [sic] where the person has every motivation to act one way, and no motivation to act another, including acting on whim or just to prove he has free will. Joe, you brought up those examples; I didn't. And this is not an issue of prediction. I'm not saying that because a person's value judgments determine his choices, one can always predict what action he will choose. And no, I'm not taking back my position that if your actions are necessitated by your values, there is not choice. Notice I say your action is necessitated, not your choice. There is no choice in determinism. It's a stolen concept. There are alternatives that are physically possible, but the action is an automatic response to X. In your case, X is your values, whatever those are. So I didn't "choose" to vote for Bidinotto. Is that what you're saying? I didn't "choose" the answer on the test that I knew to be correct, because I had no reason to choose the alternatives. Is that your position?
I wrote, "Besides, if there is a motivation to pick something else, it must be one that favors the other alternative -- otherwise it's not a motivation to pick something else, because a motivation is necessarily preferential." I think you can be motivated to do more than one thing, and choose which you will act on. Are you suggesting that in your value determinism scheme, there is no mixed motivations? That when the calculation of which you prefer completes, you are 100% emotionally wedded to that action and feel no urge to do the other? I'm thinking about a hard decision. Which car should I buy? A or B. Both are nice. I choose A, but I clearly feel a desire to buy B instead. I am motivated to buy B. But I will myself to go with A instead. Okay. Let's be clear on what the alternatives are. You are motivated to buy Car A instead of not buying a car at all, AND you are motivated to buy Car B instead of not buying a car at all. That much is true. The question is: Are you motivated to buy Car A instead of Car B? If you are, then you will choose Car A. But you cannot be motivated to buy Car A instead of Car B and SIMULTANEOUSLY motivated to buy Car B instead of Car A. By the same token, you cannot choose either car over the other without PREFERRING one to the other. You cannot prefer Car A, but buy Car B instead, or prefer Car B, but buy Car A instead. Whichever car you like the most is the one you will buy (ceteris paribus).
I wrote, "What you're calling 'acting' [versus 'reacting'] is an arbitrary choice that is not made for the sake of any perceived end or goal." This is entirely wrong. Again, you posit that the alternatives are determinism, which is an automatic and passive response to stimuli...I wouldn't call the response "automatic" or "passive," which suggests a response that is unintentional and purposeless. ...and non-identity or indeterminism, where your "choices" are not based on your will but are seeming[ly] random. As long as you insist on this false alternative, of course determinism will seem like the only possible alternative. But the alternative is not between being a slave to your values and not having any at all. To say that a value is an object of an action -- something one acts to gain or keep -- is not to say that the actor is a slave to it. Slavery, by definition negates the slave's values -- negates his choice. I don't understand how you view your own choices. If I'm trying to figure out whether to post or go to bed, it's an active process. First, I'm aware that there is a choice to make, and what the alternatives are. I put some focus into each choice to understand what the possible trade-offs are. Exactly! And after evaluating the trade-offs, you choose the action that you judge to be the most valuable. I also am aware that I have certain emotional or physical needs. My emotions tell me that I want to make you understand. My body is telling me that I'm sleepy. I find it emotionally frustrating that you are so convinced of your position when it contradicts experience and is so poorly defined. As I consider the alternative, my mind starts to wander. I am sleepy after all. I focus more sharply. My moral values tell me that I'd appreciate posting more if we didn't have this big disagreement. I value clarity. I value making progress. I value getting to the heart of the issue. There are countless reasons for and against. I disvalue wasting my time, as I feel this topic usually is. I disvalue arguing about something I don't think I'll change my mind about. I disvalue the effort it takes to make myself as clear as possible on ideas that I consider simple. Short term, the costs are high. Long term, the benefits vary. If I convince you, we can have more intelligent discussions, and others may also learn and contribute. But that seems unlikely. Another possibility is that by formulating a response, I'll better identify the ideas, learn to communicate them, and benefit in the long term. Again, this whole thing requires focus. It requires looking at all of these competing alternatives. There is no magical values that I've decided on in the past that make my decision for me. Of course not, and that's not what I'm saying. Your values in this case involve trying to figure out what further choices are worth making, but that very process is something you value and is necessitated by that value. The process is long and focused. I run the calculations. I look deep at the alternatives. I make a choice, knowing that the other alternative has benefits as well and I'll need to continue to evaluate as I go.
This is what I mean by an active process. As opposed to "here are my alternatives, and my values tell me I must do X".
And this is the important part. This active process, this awareness that I focus on the various alternatives, and form the will to act, is the critical issue. It means that I could have chosen either thing. Yes, "could have" chosen either thing, IF you had considered it worth choosing. That this experience of making a choice is not an illusion. That there is no magic "value" that necessitated it, and that suggesting so is not simply a gross simplification, but actually removes from the equation this active effort of focusing awareness. But the effort is itself something you value and consider worth making. All determinism does this. It makes the "choices" simply automatic responses to some hidden values, or secret understanding, or outside influences, or emotional reactions, or whatever. Joe, if you do something you like, because you like to do it, is that an automatic response? No, it isn't. An automatic response is a purposeless action, like the patella reflex, not an action that one takes because one values its object. If I choose poorly, I can be blamed for not focusing enough. Yes, you can, because to blame someone for a bad action simply means that he chose the action with full knowledge of what he was doing. The fact that he valued the action and didn't think it was bad does not absolve him from blame. It's not something I can blame on outside influences, or inside influences. It can be understood that I may be even strongly influenced one way or another, but that the choice is still ultimately a product of my own focused awareness. My own reasoning mind. I don't remove myself from the decision making. I'm at the center of it. The buck stops here. Of course, you can't remove yourself from the decision making, but your decision is itself based on your antecedent values. You make a decision for the sake of some end or goal -- something that you want to achieve. Determinism removes this active process from the equation. It makes the "choices" into straightforward mathematical products of input stimuli. The stimulus forces the choice. It necessitates it. The active process that I claim is the real decision making is removed. No longer is your mind the source of the actions. And so moral responsibility is taken with it. You can't be blamed. Your values can be blamed, but you're not even responsible for those. They arose from previous values, which arose from....who knows. But choice is an illusion. Not true. Every choice reflects a value judgment. Suppose I believe that abortion is murder and execute an abortionist, because I think he deserves to die for killing an innocent human life. The fact that I saw no reason to spare the doctor's life does not absolve me of my crime. I am still blameworthy, and should be punished in order to deter such crimes in the future. And I mean that. Where we experience this process of choosing, requiring effort and focus, and ultimately deciding for whatever reasons (including whims or defiance), none of that would be real in the determinism framework. We may think we are focusing on the problem, but it is in fact these magical values (or other external stimuli) that are compelling our brain to function in a way that we merely experience as choosing. This long process I described earlier would be simply a rationalization. It would be an illusion created by our brains to make us feel like we're in control, while in fact the values colliding or mixing without our participation, making the choice for us. I don't know where you get this stuff -- "magical values compelling our brain to function." If I decide after investigating two candidates that A is better than B, no "magical value" has compelled my brain to choose A over B. I choose A over B, because, after evaluated the two candidates, I consider A a better choice than B. Having reached that conclusion, I cannot then choose B over A. If I could, then THAT would be a "magical value."
- Bill
|
|