Thomas's comments are in italics, mine (Jason's) are in bold. To read Thomas's comments to my original entry, click comments and scroll down to bottom. However, I posted most if not all of his comments on this current entry.
First, let me preface by stating that you did not directly address my argument as regards to freedom being an illusion. You have not demonstrated that my argument is invalid or the premises are untrue. You only seem to have problems regarding my definition with the term, “reality”. Also, I was not giving a full-blown defense of freewill vs. determinism; I was only giving an argument (giving counterexamples) against the claim that freedom, as a metaphysical concept, is an illusion.
For example; your thoughts are realities - they exist. However, they are not real to me -- and vice versa-- unless you publish them here. I can then duplicate your reality by understanding your words, although that duplication in my mind is my reality and not yours.
Granted our thoughts are real to us as individuals. However, it does not follow that your thoughts are not “real” to me. Your thoughts exist, just as mine exist, regardless of whom is around. I think what you are meaning to say is that I do not have "first person" access to your thoughts, and you do not have "first person" access to my thoughts. However, that has nothing to do with the ontological status of thoughts. That is, thoughts amongst persons exist regardless of other persons existing or not. I think you are confusing the ontological status of thoughts with the concept of "first person" access of thoughts. In other words, you are committing what is known in logic as a categorical mistake.
This understanding of Reality and Real resolves millenary debates about reality in philosophy and also opens the doors to great personal power in controlling realities and one's life.
The supreme motivation of all human behavior is to control realities. This statement IS provable, but that is another line of knowledge. Back to the question free will.
There is no way to logically resolve the argument of free will, because you can always claim that the choice was predetermined by a greater and longer chain of cause and effect, all the way back to the Big Bang and beyond to the FIRST CAUSE. The question of free will is part of the greater question of Cause and Effect in the universe.
HOWEVER, we can see that a world in which free will is denied will not work. If there is no free will, then there is no personal accountability for actions. Anybody could do anything they wanted (such as steal, kill) and not be punished or held accountable because they could claim their actions were pre-determined by a Cause other than themselves, wherefore they are not response-able. Therefore, for the world to work we presume and must presume free will and therefore Responsibility and Accountability. Where there is any free will or not is both unprovable and moot.
Overall, your response to my entry is in no way an argument against my position. In fact, it entirely misses the mark from what I was arguing. Your main gripe was with my use of the term, “reality”. However, as it turns out, your definition of reality is a bit confused, if not, incoherent, and in need of refinement. I can only hope that my articulation of the term has provided some insight.
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