Filip Sandor
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2004
- Messages
- 259
The debate over free will has pervaded many cultures since the dawn of human intelligence and philosophical thinking, but have we really figured anything out in all these years of investigatingthe subject? One might wonder, even if only briefly, why the question of free is still being raised in so many circles of philosophical debate by non-religious people. It's pretty clear where someone religious people might get there idea of free will from and the fact that their faith in it makes believing in free will very straight forward and easy, but what about the rest of us? What about physicists who's lives are devoted to studying the vast dynamics of order that govern the Universe? Why do even many physicists doubt determinism?
One thing is for sure, randomness is a weird thing, but does it actually exist?
Is it possible for randomness and orderliness to co-exist in a relative balance??
Is such a varying degree of "freedom or randomness vs. orderliness" observable in physics as it is in our daily choices?
I think it's normal to assume that all our choices are directed by more subtle forces (ie. our subconscious, which is determined by the ordered physics in our brain, etc.), but why do we feel at times as though we have more freedom of choice than others, if there is no 'freedom' of choice? For example, If take off my shoes on a hot day and start walking barefoot on the pavement in the city I'm quickly forced to jump onto the grass next to the pavement or put my shoes back on (if there's no grass there!), but if I summon my 'will' I can continue barefoot until my feet either get used to the pain or the pain is unbareable, at which point it wouldn't make sense any more to keep my shoes and keep walking on the pavement.
Compare the above situation to a cooler day that's slightly overcast where the pavement is only slightly warm and I can wear my shoes or take them off at my own 'will' with relatively no sensory 'pressure' to put them on. The example is very simple, but it illustrates the difference between being forced to do something and having more 'freedom' in a different circumstance.
I find this interesting... and I think it is the answer, at least in part, to why we raise the question. What are you thoughts?
One thing is for sure, randomness is a weird thing, but does it actually exist?
Is it possible for randomness and orderliness to co-exist in a relative balance??
Is such a varying degree of "freedom or randomness vs. orderliness" observable in physics as it is in our daily choices?
I think it's normal to assume that all our choices are directed by more subtle forces (ie. our subconscious, which is determined by the ordered physics in our brain, etc.), but why do we feel at times as though we have more freedom of choice than others, if there is no 'freedom' of choice? For example, If take off my shoes on a hot day and start walking barefoot on the pavement in the city I'm quickly forced to jump onto the grass next to the pavement or put my shoes back on (if there's no grass there!), but if I summon my 'will' I can continue barefoot until my feet either get used to the pain or the pain is unbareable, at which point it wouldn't make sense any more to keep my shoes and keep walking on the pavement.
Compare the above situation to a cooler day that's slightly overcast where the pavement is only slightly warm and I can wear my shoes or take them off at my own 'will' with relatively no sensory 'pressure' to put them on. The example is very simple, but it illustrates the difference between being forced to do something and having more 'freedom' in a different circumstance.
I find this interesting... and I think it is the answer, at least in part, to why we raise the question. What are you thoughts?