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Serious A free will being

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my guy really does spawn camp new teenage female users
 
we dont even have proof causality exists, its an invented concept that helps us navigate repeating patterns of things following each other temporally
 
I thought it was a guy ?
Knight
 
I thought it was a guy ?
'it' ...
made a whole ass post saying im done larping as a moid btw
a theoretical omnipotent being preceding causality and the big bang could have free will as it's decisions aren't bound to causality.

@Darkeningstar @h3artara
true, then the usual framework of determinism doesnt apply, because determinism requires a chain of cause and effect within spacetime. if causality itself begins with the big bang then anything 'outside' or 'before' that would not be constrained by causal necessity.

here's the issues you have to consider tho
if its decisions are completely uncaused then you might say they are 'free' in the sense of not being determined.
pn the other hand if choices are truly uncaused then some would say they are random, not free in the meaningful sense of intentional agency.

so the question becomes does free will require uncaused intentionality or just the absence of external determination?
 
we dont even have proof causality exists, its an invented concept that helps us navigate repeating patterns of things following each other temporally
hume's problem of causation

then i guess that leaves us with two possible stances regarding the omnipotent being idea:

if causality is real: then a being 'outside' it could be free in the way OP described.
if it isnt: then the being’s freedom is even harder to think about, because 'free from causality' becomes 'free from our only way of describing events.'

now there's the question of whether free will is possible only if causality is real or if it requires stepping outside causality
 
hume's problem of causation

then i guess that leaves us with two possible stances regarding the omnipotent being idea:

if causality is real: then a being 'outside' it could be free in the way OP described.
if it isnt: then the being’s freedom is even harder to think about, because 'free from causality' becomes 'free from our only way of describing events.'

now there's the question of whether free will is possible only if causality is real or if it requires stepping outside causality
But how can free will exist outside causality tho ? Assuming it ( causality)does exist
 
i still dont think the OP makes sense because the notion of "will" is predicated on causation

will is a power, and power implies cause and effect (x has the power to cause effect y)

instead of seeing will as a cause among causes a being outside causality would have a primordial will: the ability to originate decisions that dont fit into cause and effect relations at all.
then in this view 'will' = the act of choosing regardless of causal mechanics.

human will depends on causal structures for eg neurons → muscles move (lowk shitty example i couldnt think of anything better) but a transcendent being's will could be of a different order not an event in a causal chain but why causal chains exist in the first place.
 
so the question becomes does free will require uncaused intentionality or just the absence of external determination?
free will isnt a logical concept, its a category error -- only agents can be free, powers like the will can't be anymore free than gravity or electromagnetic force can
 
instead of seeing will as a cause among causes a being outside causality would have a primordial will: the ability to originate decisions that dont fit into cause and effect relations at all.
then in this view 'will' = the act of choosing regardless of causal mechanics.

human will depends on causal structures for eg neurons → muscles move (lowk shitty example i couldnt think of anything better) but a transcendent being's will could be of a different order not an event in a causal chain but why causal chains exist in the first place.
a foid user who writes anything longer than 3 lines? definitely a femcel
 
did i not say im a femcel milkjar :sadcat: this is just proof
also god forbid i get to be a geek about philosophy
every other foid here is incapable of abstract thought
 
But how can free will exist outside causality tho ? Assuming it ( causality)does exist
as i said
if you assume causality is absolutely necessary for 'will' then free will outside causality is impossible.
but if you broaden 'will' to mean origination and intentionality or even the ground of causation, then it’s conceivable that a being could have free will outside causality tho its a kind of will we cant experience ourselves since we’re stuck inside the causal web.
 
free will isnt a logical concept, its a category error -- only agents can be free, powers like the will can't be anymore free than gravity or electromagnetic force can
ure right that free will applies to agents not to abstract forces like gravity. but the will isnt like gravity its bound up with intentionality.
when we talk about ‘free will’ we mean the agent's capacity to initiate intentional choices not determined by prior causes we dont mean the power itself being free in isolation bc thats a diff category than a natural force.

mb if my rambles dont make sense btw
 
the ability to originate decisions that dont fit into cause and effect relations at all.
-ability
-originate
-decision
are all meaningless without the concept of causation
then in this view 'will' = the act of choosing regardless of causal mechanics
action also requires causation im afraid
human will depends on causal structures for eg neurons → muscles move (lowk shitty example i couldnt think of anything better) but a transcendent being's will could be of a different order not an event in a causal chain but why causal chains exist in the first place.
but then he would be the cause of the causal chains
 
ure right that free will applies to agents not to abstract forces like gravity. but the will isnt like gravity its bound up with intentionality.
when we talk about ‘free will’ we mean the agent's capacity to initiate intentional choices not determined by prior causes we dont mean the power itself being free in isolation bc thats a diff category than a natural force.

mb if my rambles dont make sense btw
if they're not determined by prior causes, then they're random

but obviously our power of choosing is determined internally at least in part

i still consider that as being free, since freedom to me just means having the power to act according to the will, regardless of whether the will was determined or not
 
an omnipotent being's "decisions" wouldn't just be unfettered by cause and consequence if it actually existed before causation. They would also come before the idea of a decision. We only think of free will in opposition to determinism, although determinism doesn't exist outside of causation. Therefore, referring to it as "free will" may be a category error. It's putting something outside of time into a human, temporal framework.

Even crazier is the fact that if this being created reality, then its will is not only free but also creates the potential for choices. makes "is will itself the fundamental substance of reality?" the new question instead of "does it have free will?"
 

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