BradCube said:
In a present tense situation, the individual has the ability at any stage to choose another option as long as they can provide themselves with sufficient reasoning for doing so. It is this individuals ability to decide/choose which I would claim enables their will to be free (since their will is linked to their choices).
Look at the part I quoted in
italics. It doesn't really say a lot to claim that a person can make a number of different choices
provided that they are backed up by a sufficient line of reasoning for each kind of choice. It seems kind of like saying that a person can make a number of different choices provided that their experiences in the last 24 hours differ appropriately. Sure, in these
counterfactual situations a person may end up willing something different (as a result of having slightly different memories or a different line of reasoning). You have to note, however, that you are speaking in conditional terms: "as long as they can" --> i.e.
if they can (insert capacity... )
then free will is made possible.
The problem, then, is that I don't think you have established that it is possible for a person to reason differently than they do. Here debates about dualism/materialism enter the picture because if we are working with a hard, computational materialism then it would seem that reasoning is deterministic and I'm not sure what room there is for a 'free' capacity of reason. Essentially I feel that the arguments I have provided against a 'free' will similarly apply to a 'free' faculty of reason (and so I'm not sure how introducing such a faculty saves your concept of free will?). Counterfactual conditionals are all well and good but unless you can show that the
antecendent holds (or at least that it is
possible, if you even want to keep your position tenable) then I don't think you have made much of a case.
BradCube said:
Interesting to see how much the vegetarian opinion has developed since I brought it back up again. I'm of the opinion that if there are indeed no objective morals, then all of such discussion in the end is ultimately meaningless right?
Yes and no. Yes, in so far as I don't think a debate will eventually reveal the
Truth (capital 'T'). On the other hand, I'm not sure why the debate should be seen as entirely meaningless if our claims aren't objective. Is discussion of music, artwork, literature or music meaningless? What about preferred film genres or individuals we find most attractive? Even if we acknowledge that aesthetic, or preference based, claims within such kinds of discourse are never objectively true, but are instead statements of preference, we do not therefore debase the discourse to the point of being meaningless. We're not just talking past one another.
Think of the importance of conflict resolution. Even if two parties hold contrary values they can still seek a compromise. It is often quite enlightening to learn and talk about values and how they differ, especially if we are to try to live in harmony and seek some kind of peaceful equilibrium (or as close to one as possible). So sure, while a claim like 'causing pain is wrong' has an element of meaningless I still think debates of this sort can be quite useful. Understanding is valuable.