RichardKennaway comments on Evolutionary psychology as "the truth-killer" - Less Wrong

10 Post author: Benedict 23 July 2012 08:44PM

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Comment author: RichardKennaway 26 July 2012 03:51:48PM *  1 point [-]

What do you mean by "free will"? What do you think of Eliezer's solution to The Problem Of Free Will, which seems satisfactory to me: the past does not reach around the present to cause the future, it causes the future through the present. The decisions that you and I make are part of that chain of causation. The subjective sense of "free will" is just what it feels like to take an action without having knowledge of one's internal machinery.

If you think that free will is something else, what?

Comment author: Vladimir_Nesov 26 July 2012 04:04:38PM *  1 point [-]

The subjective sense of "free will" is just what it feels like to take an action without having knowledge of one's internal machinery.

Having knowledge of this internal machinery won't take away "free will", and one isn't usually just surprised with decisions selected by an introspectively inaccessible process that then have to be enacted, there is an option of reflecting on the output of any given opaque decision procedure and choosing something else. The relevant uncertainty is about what you will decide, not about the procedure that will be used to make the decision. If you know what you'll decide, you have already decided; if you are still deciding, you don't yet know what you'll decide, and absent this knowledge, you are free to consider the possibilities.