if "Science" doubts the existence of free will then there is something wrong with Science not my clear perception of my free will (along with the clear perceptions of just about everyone alive and who has ever lived)."
Whatever the conclusion here, it will not be attained by ninja'ing "everybody's perceptions" into natural law. Everybody perceives that heavy objects fall faster than light ones. Everybody perceives that squares A and B are different colours.
Do I need to recite the whole litany? We aren't Aristotelians or apologists or something, we don't get to do philosophy just by sitting back in our armchairs and imagining how the world "must" obviously be. You have to actually go and look at the world. Hence our "faith" in the lab.
Perhaps I should state it in a slightly different way. There is no reason for me or anyone else to doubt the clear perception we have of our own free will. Prove to me scientifically that it does not exist, that it is some kind of illusion that all human beings experience.
A monthly thread for posting rationality-related quotes you've seen recently (or had stored in your quotesfile for ages).
ETA: It would seem that rationality quotes are no longer desired. After several days this thread stands voted into the negatives. Wolud whoever chose to to downvote this below 0 would care to express their disapproval of the regular quotes tradition more explicitly? Or perhaps they may like to browse around for some alternative posts that they could downvote instead of this one? Or, since we're in the business of quotation, they could "come on if they think they're hard enough!"