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  • - It's very often that in the conversations about free will,

  • you find people who believe in free will

  • contrasted with determinists,

  • who just think the laws of physics are gonna tell us

  • what happens in the world.

  • 'Determinism' is a statement

  • about how the laws of physics work.

  • It goes back to Pierre-Simon Laplace

  • explicating the implications of classical mechanics,

  • a la Isaac Newton.

  • He says, "If you knew the position

  • and velocity of everything in the world,

  • the equations of classical physics

  • deterministically predict what will happen next."

  • There's no randomness:

  • you know exactly what's gonna happen in the future.

  • To me, this is one of the biggest mistakes we could make.

  • Not that you should be determinist or not,

  • but that there is some relationship

  • between determinism versus non-determinism,

  • and free will versus non-free will.

  • Those are two separate questions.

  • 'Libertarian free will' is truly an ability to make choices

  • and do things in the world that cannot even, in principle,

  • in any way, be explained

  • by stuff obeying the laws of physics.

  • Immanuel Kant and other people put it in these terms:

  • They said, "There's no way of thinking of a human being

  • as somehow a collection of physical things

  • obeying the laws of physics."

  • There is something that is inescapably human

  • that cannot be reduced to an understanding

  • of ourselves as just mindless pieces

  • conglomerated together to make something with a mind.

  • Now I would say, no modern scientist believes in that-

  • to say no is an exaggeration.

  • There's probably some who do,

  • but the overwhelming majority of scientists

  • take seriously the idea that we know what we are physically.

  • We are collections of atoms, molecules, etc.-

  • that, in principle, obey the laws of physics.

  • And where you get into a little bit of tension

  • with the underlying laws of physics is you say,

  • "Okay, I'm describing myself.

  • You know, I have some knowledge,

  • but I also have some preferences.

  • I have some desires, I have some values.

  • I have some feelings, I have some emotions.

  • And you're telling me that I'm also a collection of neurons.

  • And then you're telling me that those neurons

  • are made of atoms and particles

  • and they obey the laws of physics.

  • And once I get to the level of neurons,

  • much less the level of atoms and molecules,

  • there's no feelings there."

  • And so this is where we enter

  • into the idea of 'compatibilist free will.'

  • Compatibilism says that we can still talk about human beings

  • as agents making choices, while also agreeing

  • that we don't violate the laws of physics.

  • And to say, "Well, how are those two things compatible?"

  • That's a perfectly fair question,

  • and the answer is 'emergence.'

  • The answer is layers of reality.

  • The answer is there are different ways

  • of talking about the world

  • that are compatible with each other,

  • but very, very different.

  • When I open the closet door in the morning

  • and say, "Should I wear the blue shirt or the red shirt?"

  • It doesn't help me to say,

  • "Well, I'm gonna do whatever my atoms want me to do."

  • My atoms have no wants.

  • There is something that I have that is a want,

  • and the fact that I'm made of atoms

  • doesn't make that go away.

  • The compatibilist position is not

  • one that denies determinism

  • or indeterminism-it doesn't care.

  • What it's saying is

  • that you can both be a law-abiding thing in the Universe,

  • a physical system subject to the laws of nature,

  • and it makes sense to talk about you

  • as an agent making choices because you're talking

  • about a different level of description-

  • a higher-level, emerging kind of phenomenon.

  • I think that the best objection

  • to my own view about free will, the compatibilist view,

  • the emergent view, is that it's a little loosey-goosey

  • in some sense, right?

  • I'm saying I can talk about human beings,

  • a level of human beings,

  • or I could talk about atoms and so forth.

  • Well, where do I draw the line?

  • The non-compatibilist could say,

  • "Well, what if someday I'm able

  • to read your microexpressions on your face

  • and exactly and reliably predict what you will do next?

  • Would you still have free will?"

  • And my answer is: "Maybe not."

  • My answer is: "I can imagine in principle, getting so good

  • at predicting how human beings actually behave

  • on the basis of truly accessible information,

  • that the concept of free will

  • no longer becomes helpful or necessary."

  • That's just an improvement in our scientific understanding.

  • Do I think that actually will ever happen?

  • No, for lots of good reasons.

  • Human beings are incredibly complex.

  • There's chaotic dynamics, there's quantum fluctuations.

  • There's a whole bunch of reasons why we should expect

  • to never give up on the picture of human beings

  • as agents making decisions.

  • A lot of people who are anti-free will

  • the way they phrase it is:

  • "I will believe that there's free will

  • if there's a way that I could have acted differently."

  • And what they have in mind

  • is they are collections of particles

  • or, you know, whatever physical system,

  • that is obeying the laws of physics-

  • and, in fact, they could not have acted differently

  • 'cause the laws of physics are the laws of physics.

  • But the reality is,

  • given the actual information you know about yourself,

  • you could have acted differently

  • because the information you have about yourself

  • is wildly incomplete.

  • It's compatible with all sorts

  • of different microscopic arrangements

  • of what's going on in your brain and your body.

  • That incomplete information

  • is why we're not perfect reasoners about the future.

  • We have an ability to reason counterfactually:

  • to think not about just what will happen,

  • but of various things that could happen,

  • and then pick the one that we think is a good one.

  • And since we don't know the positions and velocities

  • of every molecule in the Universe,

  • we can't say what would happen

  • just given the laws of physics.

  • What we have to say is,

  • "Given the choices I make,

  • what is the future that I'm going to help bring about?"

  • So like it or not, the world that we really know and live in

  • is one where our choices matter.

  • That's where meaning comes from,

  • from recognizing that in the real world

  • of the knowledge that we have

  • and our computational boundedness,

  • we have some responsibility

  • for bringing about what is going to happen next.

  • - To learn even more

  • from the world's biggest thinkers, get Big Think+

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- It's very often that in the conversations about free will,

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