| | I am new to this forum but have been very interested in the Objectivist position on free will for years. From my reading in your forum, my position seems closest to that of William Dwyer. I believe that free will can be true/valid at one level and not at another level of analysis.
As I understand it, Ayn Rand believed that free will is introspectively obvious. The evidence for free will, she believed, is in thinking and choosing, something you observe yourself doing. Let's analyze this, speaking (for simplicity) about physical actions.
I first observe that for every action that I take, I can either know why I did it, or not know. For example, I might think mightily about the choices offered to me at a restaurant and order 'large platter A' because it fits many criteria (I am very hungry, I want a lot of variety, etc.). For this choice I am fully conscious of why I made this selection. But also, in this manner, my choice was somewhat 'dictated' by the logic of the situation - it really was the best choice given my values and options; it wasn't exactly free, it was 'determined', in a way, by the reality of the situation, as I saw it at the time. Indeed Rand acknowleges the fact that most of our decisions are 'determined' by facts, values, etc.. by stating that the real choice is simply whether we think or not, the rest (this implies) is to some extent determined.
For some actions, I am NOT fully aware of why I do them. For example, if I am engaged in a soccer game, I will not be able to state to you in each instance why I swerved left or right. When speaking with a group of people, I may not know exactly why I phrased something the way I did. Or, if I am purposefully TRYING to act randomly, say with the game rock/scissors/paper - I may not know why I chose the option I did. In these cases, the actual outcome could easily have been determined by factors outside of my control; that is, outside of my conscious control of them; factors in the subconscious or elsewhere, that happened to lead to the result they did. In other words, there is nothing about the experience that obviously tells me that it could have been otherwise!
Analyzing in more detail, then, Rand's emphasis of the decision to think or not, I'm not sure it can escape the two options above. The reasons I choose to think or focus harder are many, including: (1) good thinking habits (2) I happen to have a good energy level at the time (3) recognition of the importance of focusing at the time (4) other factors outside my conscious awareness.
I have a hard time avoiding a (hard) deterministic position given my arguments above, but on the other hand - there is a sense in which we all clearly do have free will. Thinking DOES matter and DOES lead to results. It is efficacious - not an epiphenomenon, in my view, it is just constrained more than we seem to realize. So I believe we DO make choices, we do choose to think, we do make decisions that affect our lives and that this is important. This, I believe, is what we typically are referring to when we speak of free will.
I believe there are many implications of the above argument, but not as many as you might think. Certainly not a rejection of ethics, or justice, or the important of thinking and trying hard, etc.. But this discussion is for another time, just wanted to see what you thought of the above.
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