Why Free Will Doesn't Exist

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 30. 03. 2018
  • Free will does not exist. That's the claim I'm making, anyway. To me, it seems impossible even to imagine a world in which free will makes any sense. This video has been a long time coming.
    @CosmicSkeptic
    -------------------------------------------LINKS-------------------------------------------
    My conversation with Stephen: • Everyday Life Without ...
    Stephen's 'Free Will - Debunked': • Free Will - Debunked
    Stephen's conversation with Matt: • Matt Dillahunty VS St...
    Stephen's original response to Matt: • A Response to Matt Dil...
    Matt's original video: • Atheist Debates - Patr...
    My book review of Harris' Free Will: cosmicskeptic.com/2017/06/19/...
    -----------------------------------------SUPPORT-----------------------------------------
    Support the Cosmic Skeptic CZcams channel on Patreon: / cosmicskeptic
    Merchandise now available: teespring.com/stores/cosmicsk...
    --------------------------------------CONNECT--------------------------------------------
    My Website/Blog: www.cosmicskeptic.com
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    SOCIAL LINKS:
    Twitter: / cosmicskeptic
    Facebook: / cosmicskeptic
    Instagram: / cosmicskeptic
    Snapchat: cosmicskeptic
    ---------------------------------------CONTACT---------------------------------------
    Email: cosmicskeptic@gmail.com
    Alex O'Connor
    Po Box 1610
    OXFORD
    OX4 9LL
    ENGLAND

Komentáře • 16K

  • @CosmicSkeptic
    @CosmicSkeptic  Před 6 lety +1150

    Apparently CZcams doesn't always notify subscribers when people upload anymore. Please click the little bell to make sure you see when I do, or follow me on social media (@cosmicskeptic). Let me know what you think of all this.

    • @joshsanders1573
      @joshsanders1573 Před 6 lety +7

      CosmicSkeptic Love you 😘

    • @fullup91
      @fullup91 Před 6 lety +14

      I see CosmicSkeptic, I click. Freewill, notwithstanding.

    • @jasonbiggs1624
      @jasonbiggs1624 Před 6 lety +7

      Ok I mentioned this before in my other response, but I'll lay down another video to explain in full how free will is discussed and how it is necessary for you to have free will to do things like knowing truth, or knowing if what you say is true.
      I actually foudn it a bit cheeky you glossed over the problem that it introduces of not have interllectual liberty my dude, nice try but I know very well the issue you have there.
      Anyway I expect ya to address my points when I make the video. Overall, your points were good but the logic did not follow to it's conclusion, and there's a underlying self defeating idea in your entire argument.

    • @MinecraftRaccoon012
      @MinecraftRaccoon012 Před 6 lety +1

      I got notified without the bell. I will click it anyway.

    • @KnapperJackCrafty
      @KnapperJackCrafty Před 6 lety +14

      The problem with your idea of free will is that you're starting with the ending. Deliberation exists before the desire that leads to the action. The longer the time In deliberation, the less certain the outcome. In addition, you haven't discussed the absence of desire as an alternative.

  • @huskymcfluff
    @huskymcfluff Před 5 lety +8536

    Imagine those books are actually on the floor, and they're just really, really big.

  • @moriahgamesdev
    @moriahgamesdev Před 6 lety +3876

    I was in a Subway's once and the girl asked my friend 'Do you want extra cheese?' to which he replied, 'I don't know' and for a brief moment the entire structure of the universe just stopped.

    • @F1stBr34k3r
      @F1stBr34k3r Před 5 lety +160

      Kind of like how it takes time to process anything, even hand movement, the brain probably got a slow / unreachable receptor or something. Or maybe the brain decided "let them choose for me, as I trust their decision to be the best" + had an added fear of being wrong.

    • @jlind3161
      @jlind3161 Před 5 lety +10

      @@scottmcadam4509 I will make them our angels again.
      Let's find out if I'm telling the truth. Won't we?

    • @scottmcadam4509
      @scottmcadam4509 Před 5 lety +17

      Take crack cocaine and meth much ? What has your comment got to do with anything ?

    • @maggieann-mae5189
      @maggieann-mae5189 Před 5 lety +95

      scott mcadam you can't just assume all women are shit at making decisions... What does your comment have to do with anything... They were talking about their friend at Subway. The friend was a HE.

    • @scottmcadam4509
      @scottmcadam4509 Před 5 lety +8

      Darwin replace Subway with "Dealers house " and Cheese with "Crack cocaine" then story makes perfect sense .

  • @bobrandom5545
    @bobrandom5545 Před 6 měsíci +215

    I think it's even more simple, yet deeper than that. Any action is preceded by a thought. If you want to choose between vanilla and chocolate, you think the decision before you physically make it. So, free will would then require that you choose your thoughts, which is paradoxical. How can you choose to think something, without already thinking about it?

    • @moss_yass
      @moss_yass Před 6 měsíci +43

      This comment makes me suddenly very distrustful of the voice in my head. Where does it really come from if I can’t control it? Is it really me?

    • @bobrandom5545
      @bobrandom5545 Před 6 měsíci +39

      @@moss_yass My hypothesis is that that voice is indeed not "you". I'd say that "you" are merely the passive experience of having those thoughts. I think the thought "where does that voice in my head come from" is proof of that. Clearly, you see the voice already as something that you "have", instead of something that you "are". So, what are you?
      I feel bad that my comment made you feel distrustful though. I sincerely hope that you can approach the dilemma with positive curiosity, instead of with distrust. In everyday life, that voice feels like it's "you", and that works totally fine.

    • @mallvalim
      @mallvalim Před 5 měsíci +5

      I think before thinking that you want vanilla rather than chocolate you think and evaluate you options, and during this process you make your choice wich then becomes your desire, no?

    • @Mandragara
      @Mandragara Před 5 měsíci +6

      @@mallvalim That process of evaluation is done with a heirarchy of relative 'wants' though.

    • @rcnelson
      @rcnelson Před 5 měsíci +4

      A fly flew into my eye and I blinked without thinking. I always prefer chocolate to vanilla so when offered a choice I automatically choose chocolate without thinking about it. When faced with a variety of foods I consider what I prefer and choose accordingly. What I like caused my preference but did not determine me to make that choice--next time I might choose vanilla, say, to win a bet or out of boredom. Every effect has a case, but doesn't necessarily destine us.

  • @jonb4020
    @jonb4020 Před 6 měsíci +6

    You express things well Alex, and it is great that you have chosen this path to discuss so many philosophical ideas. I hope, and indeed, believe, that most of your videas will prompt serious thought and great discussions. I don't think you succeed in what you attempt on this one, but it was for sure a very big ask!

  • @captainhobo6395
    @captainhobo6395 Před 6 lety +712

    "Man can do what he wills but he cannot will what he wills."

    • @jonathanboue2975
      @jonathanboue2975 Před 5 lety +22

      Schopenhauer

    • @jacksonporter6720
      @jacksonporter6720 Před 5 lety +6

      It makes sense now

    • @rickc2102
      @rickc2102 Před 5 lety +3

      Thank you for sharing that phrasing, Cap'n. Seems rather more clear to me now.

    • @baybydilly742
      @baybydilly742 Před 4 lety +10

      I reckon compatibilists believe in free will simply because "Man can do what he wills'" regardless of the fact that "he cannot will what he wills."

    • @akshually9463
      @akshually9463 Před 4 lety

      >imagine believing freewill is an illusion based on retarded antiquated physics and darwinian evolution which has basically been mathematically disproven.

  • @JDragonblade1103
    @JDragonblade1103 Před 4 lety +595

    “Want” doesn’t seem like a real word anymore.
    edit: guys i was making a joke about how many times Alex said “want”. Not trying to have a deep philosophical conversation about it.

    • @jakethewolfie119
      @jakethewolfie119 Před 4 lety +35

      Well maybe you should want for it to seem like a real word.

    • @Camwize
      @Camwize Před 4 lety +12

      That would probably be due to semantic satiation.

    • @rbst-dg8ji
      @rbst-dg8ji Před 3 lety +3

      Want seems like a desire. You still have desires without free will 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @JohnDoe-bt4ps
      @JohnDoe-bt4ps Před 3 lety +6

      @@rbst-dg8ji
      Yes, but you can resist the desire therefore establishing a freedom of will over it.

    • @rllys1mple681
      @rllys1mple681 Před 3 lety +11

      @@JohnDoe-bt4ps why would you 'want' to resist desires?

  • @ZuluLing
    @ZuluLing Před 9 měsíci +7

    I love how you speak Alex, yours so calm and easy to follow ❤

  • @timtrautwein
    @timtrautwein Před 9 měsíci +3

    Thank you very much for this video! Amazing explanation!

  • @estherriley4011
    @estherriley4011 Před 3 lety +733

    My OCD already taught me long ago that I don't have free will

    • @shinmoda
      @shinmoda Před 3 lety

      What do you mean by this, if you don't mind me asking? (No, I am not asking you to clarify OCD, I'm asking you to elaborate on what you mean by it making you realize you don't have free will.)

    • @p11_studios
      @p11_studios Před 3 lety +70

      @@shinmoda I’m pretty sure they meant it as a joke, but Obsessive Compulsive disorder is based on the experience of compulsions, basically like your brain acting like an annoying younger siblings like “do it. You have to” to the extreme

    • @shinmoda
      @shinmoda Před 3 lety +3

      @@p11_studios Again, I wasn't asking then to tell me what OCD was, I was asking them to clarify how they mean it taught them they didn't have free will, but I guess based on the compulsions it's like your own brain forcing you rather than others. I found, though, that as time gets going and it's been longer since my original diagnosis, I tend to fend off the sudden episodes with rational thought; but originally, I always felt like if I didn't do when I felt I needed to do them, then something will happen (negative). Or the flip side, sometimes I felt that if I do something then something will happen (positive). I still respond to these thoughts due to it making me feel satisfied but it's not as bad as it once was. It got tough when, being someone interested in spirituality, this realm of thought crossed into that realm. That's when stuff got tough.
      Thank you! :)

    • @fcchannel6162
      @fcchannel6162 Před 3 lety +1

      true but you can also get help for it.

    • @snipercow861
      @snipercow861 Před 3 lety +2

      I have this voice I my head that sometimes tells me to do things that I may not want to and if I do not bad things happen is this normal?

  • @samehatt5171
    @samehatt5171 Před 3 lety +752

    Sir, this is a Wendys

  • @friendlyfripptit2228
    @friendlyfripptit2228 Před 11 měsíci

    nice vid as always! This discussion always seems like it's balancing at the edge of what someone believes the universe to be. Materialists usually end up where you did (the universe is a clockwork), and the other view, simplified to that the universe is on some level conscious itself and is not bound to the future by the past (if I'm conscious of a want I can choose to not want it, and that "changes the future")

  • @kenbryantmusic
    @kenbryantmusic Před 8 měsíci +3

    Brilliant video - best I've seen on this subject. Summed up succinctly 👌👍

    • @connorallgood0922
      @connorallgood0922 Před 6 dny

      This is the best? Guess my position is solidified then, free-will is the only logical option

  • @nirvonna
    @nirvonna Před 4 lety +769

    In a nutshell: “A man can do what he wants, but he cannot want what he wants.” Schopenhauer

    • @angelusvastator1297
      @angelusvastator1297 Před 4 lety +18

      Thanks for saving me time.

    • @dophie3292
      @dophie3292 Před 4 lety +10

      Is this using want like choose?

    • @surrendersurvive7825
      @surrendersurvive7825 Před 4 lety +22

      ? A higher conciousness wants nothing though.. You are not your thoughts.. Why is it that no one is talking about levels of consciousness? This comment does not apply to all of the population.

    • @nirvonna
      @nirvonna Před 4 lety +20

      devzkii I would not say that it is using want like choose. We want what we want. I want chocolate rather than vanilla. But did I choose to want vanilla? No. I just want vanilla, i can’t help wanting what I want. It just arises as such. And I can then have the vanilla, as I want. But I didn’t actually choose to want it.

    • @nirvonna
      @nirvonna Před 4 lety +13

      surrender & survive I can relate to not wanting anything, what you call higher consciousness. There are moments of such utter peace and fulfillment that there is no wanting. If you’re sitting in bliss and don’t eventually want to eat you’ll die, however. We and the other animals have want built into our DNA. if we didn’t it would be the end of life. It seems evolutionary drive in life to want: to find warmth when you’re freezing, shade when you’re hot, food when hungry, and then there are those damn hormones that make us want to mate. All of it designed to sustain and perpetuate life.

  • @Miimu5210
    @Miimu5210 Před 6 lety +3890

    I just finished watching hentai. This video told me I didn't watch it with free will.
    I will now go back to watching hentai so that I can test this hypothesis.
    For science.

    • @governm3nt697
      @governm3nt697 Před 6 lety +236

      And the people that illustrated that hentai did not do it of free will, either.

    • @mrlloyd149
      @mrlloyd149 Před 6 lety +444

      And you can...Out of NOT free will..share links so we can validate your research

    • @plant55555
      @plant55555 Před 6 lety +60

      I second this

    • @hi-uf6jz
      @hi-uf6jz Před 6 lety +120

      This person deserves to go in the history books for this comment.

    • @Miimu5210
      @Miimu5210 Před 6 lety +43

      lloydagola I won't give you the link, but I can tell you I was watching Koi Maguwai.

  • @cringeLoop
    @cringeLoop Před 3 měsíci +2

    Thank you for bringing this so clearly

  • @mottebailley4122
    @mottebailley4122 Před 9 měsíci +62

    The issue with the initial premise is that it’s not necessary for free will. You don’t have to be in control of all the factors influencing your decisions to act differently. You just need to be aware of them, and not even all of them. Even a general degree of self-awareness of your personal psychology (not even a single factor) would be enough to reasonably conclude that one could have acted differently.

    • @Rogstin
      @Rogstin Před 9 měsíci +18

      How can one act differently? We can never repeat the _identical_ situation, and if we could, we should expect either with or without freewill, unless the universe is random at the fundamental level, the same outcome. Repeating an experiment overtime is _not_ the identical situation. A person is older, the previous attempts are part of their memory, the angle of sunlight has changed. We all only act once in each moment, and it could not be any other way than the way it was, it doesn't physically make sense to suggest otherwise.

    • @mottebailley4122
      @mottebailley4122 Před 9 měsíci +9

      @@Rogstin Why doesn’t it physically make sense? We have a degree of self awareness, which can inform us on why we make the decisions we make, and I have no idea why that doesn’t suggest we can choose differently. It seems to contradict our inner experience.
      Determinism hasn’t been able to explain 100% of our actions, so it’s absolutely an assumption that it would.

    • @thomasw153
      @thomasw153 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Rationalizing decisions does not equate to making them. The argument encapsulates your "awareness" of your inner workings. _Any_ conscious rationalization is based on your being. On nature and nurture. You don't _choose_ to "be aware" of your inner workings. You claim to be - and that contributes to the decisionmaking process. See, the awareness you claim to have _does not change anything._ it is merely your expression of one of the influences you feel your decisions are based on.

    • @mottebailley4122
      @mottebailley4122 Před 8 měsíci +12

      @@thomasw153 Your claim only works if we bisect awareness from being. All you’re actually saying is that there are mechanisms within our being driving our decisions that are inaccessible to consciousness. But that doesn’t mean it’s not *us* making the choices, it just means they’re made in a way that’s not immediately accessible to our conscious selves.
      There’s also the fact that your argument doesn’t explain how or why human beings are able to reflect and deliberate on choices they haven’t yet made. We can consciously think through decisions, imagine alternatives, and make choices based on reasoning. This subjective experience undermines strict determinism, and requires scientific explanation, not elimination.

    • @Rogstin
      @Rogstin Před 8 měsíci +10

      @@mottebailley4122 _This subjective experience undermines strict determinism_ How?
      The fundamental problem is, _how_ is a choice made. Where can it be made? Voltage thresholds and chemical transmitters. It's all obeying the laws of physics. Free will as a perception, that exists, but as a reality, it doesn't make sense.
      _and I have no idea why that doesn’t suggest we can choose differently._
      How could you choose differently? You cannot replay the moment again. Every moment is new, and no experiment I can think of could distinguish between free will and determinism. So we have to ask about what free will even means.
      Yes, I feel like I make choices, I just understand that's the result of an incredibly complex system of interactions.
      _and make choices based on reasoning._ This is why free will fails even at a high level. There is always a reason, even if it isn't something we are aware of consciously. A chain of _Why? Because!_ until we can't explain it. Where is the choice? Not just the feeling of it when we discover what the outcome is, but the moment we pick _without_ external impetus. Free will doesn't make sense.

  • @1ledluverjlp
    @1ledluverjlp Před 6 lety +549

    It appears many individuals are misunderstanding the message. Changing your mind on something isn't changing what you want, but simply following a greater want that moves in a different direction. We are endlessly following wants and what we want changes based on the environment and past experiences.

    • @777Krisztian
      @777Krisztian Před 6 lety +22

      Precisely

    • @masterleon40
      @masterleon40 Před 5 lety +24

      following a ''greater want that moves in a different direction'' is changing what you want ;-;

    • @JasonWilliams89
      @JasonWilliams89 Před 5 lety +8

      +Mr. King Kong I can't believe all these months later you're still this stupid.

    • @UGSETH2
      @UGSETH2 Před 5 lety +9

      But i'm changing what ME AS A PERSON want, choosing between your "greater want" and a "smaller want"..
      *note*
      I thoroughly believe I can make myself want something I despice, given enough time and thought..
      In other words, choosing to want what i hate

    • @adrianvasian
      @adrianvasian Před 5 lety +28

      ugseth2 but isn't changing that want, even if it's to something you hate, is satisfying your want to change ? no matter what you do, you want to do it, it's all a choice of wants evolves through time based on your experiences. :)

  • @jonrixbus
    @jonrixbus Před rokem +981

    Ironically, when I think about how I really have no free will, it makes me feel free.

    • @Siegfried5846
      @Siegfried5846 Před rokem +63

      It explains all my failures in life

    • @trustthetruth2779
      @trustthetruth2779 Před rokem +48

      @@Siegfried5846 Yea, because then you wouldn’t be accountable for anything you’ve done right or wrong, though that isn’t how societies live. They live as if we are all accountable for our actions and that’s why there are ethics. And why do we tell people you shouldn’t have done that or that wasn’t right when the person had no free will to do so? And why do we correct someone by saying, “No, this is how you do this.”
      If we believe there is no free will and want to be consistent, we cannot complain when someone violates our human rights.

    • @Terrestrial_Biological_Entity
      @Terrestrial_Biological_Entity Před rokem +47

      ​@@trustthetruth2779no.

    • @trustthetruth2779
      @trustthetruth2779 Před rokem +1

      @@satellitecannon9463 I most certainly can be consistent because right and wrong are objective according to God’s character and not my opinion or yours or anyone else’s. I just follow what He says whether I agree or not. He made the universe, so I’m not going to tell Him I know better

    • @richtomlinson7090
      @richtomlinson7090 Před rokem +67

      @@trustthetruth2779 that isn't how it works.
      You were predetermined to see this video and make the comment you made, because of all the things that happened to you before, and all that you ate and consumed, all that you were taught.
      You couldn't help but make the choices you've made, but you still feel the suprise when someone appreciates your work, or you still feel the pain of bad choices.
      You are the agent of change, but you had no other choice in the end as you look back on things that have happened.
      Theists have this loophole that they pull out when the pain of bad decisions starts to haunt them, and they often just claim it was God's plan or God's Will, so you can forgive yourself and move on.
      We live in a deterministic universe with an endless chain of causality, and there is a liberating freedom from excessive guilt, to some extent, but if someone murders another person in cold blood and they feel nothing, that isn't a normal person, and they go to prison no matter how they became broken.
      We are still held accountable for actions, but even you have to admit you have an out, in regards to these problems of choice.
      All normal people react to good and bad things and they make changes to remedy the situation, but sometimes it takes time and more input from the chain of causality, like friends telling someone they messed up.
      I simply don't believe in a God that is supernatural and outside of the Universe, making things happen and intervening when he wants and letting you have your will, and then a little bit of his will, and then a bit more of your will, and a whopping amount of his will.
      An omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent God can't give you Freewill and also be all of those things.

  • @Akkodha.
    @Akkodha. Před 8 měsíci +3

    as soon as you defined free will at 2:09 or so i instantly knew a lot of what video was going to be (my line of thought was originally stimulated by a Pursuit of Wonder video about determinism) about and completely agreed LMAO (wrote this before finishing, posted after finishing to make sure i was right

    • @nickdonaldson466
      @nickdonaldson466 Před 28 dny +1

      haha this is dope well done i hope to get liek this one day. might study phil at uni. idk, ive not thought about what i want enough

  • @linnh940
    @linnh940 Před 7 měsíci +45

    Well.. that’s genius. You definitely convinced me. I always asked people what the definition of “free will” ment to them. Now after watching this video and actually understand what you mean, i have a whole different perspective on it. Thankyou so much for this beautiful video ❤

    • @RumpyxD
      @RumpyxD Před 7 měsíci

      Whats ur instagram

    • @skeleton1765
      @skeleton1765 Před 6 měsíci +10

      I feel like the dangerous implication here is that, if there is no free will, criminals are innately evil, because they could have never chosen the right thing. Logically that creates a category of good people who are righteous and self-improving and evil people that are beyond help.

    • @MoonlightMaggie
      @MoonlightMaggie Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@skeleton1765but that also brings into question whether or not we should hold criminals morally responsible to begin with. If they had no ability to do otherwise, why should we punish them for something out of their control? Of course the obvious question is what would we do instead and to be frank, I have no idea. It’s something I’ve been trying to grapple with

    • @skeleton1765
      @skeleton1765 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@MoonlightMaggie Exactly, I do good because I want to do good, than I am part of the righteous class.
      If I can’t help but be evil, or don’t want to do good, or prefer to do the evil thing than they are part of the deplorables. This is almost leading to a justification for genocide.
      If it looks like free will, feels like free will, society and morals collapse without the assumption of free will, than why would it not be free will? How many senses/mechanisms have to positively support free will before we assume it’s true. Is it like a Schrödinger’s mechanic where we can observe what choice a person makes but only if we look at the decision matrix in their brain at a certain instance, or even after the decision has been made. Even if all the ‘decisions’ you made leading up to that one MAKE you ‘choose’ a certain outcome, does that disprove free will?
      This seems like another instance of an atheist (I’m probably part of that category/agnostic) being infinitely and annoyingly reductive. If got so annoyed with myself doing this I had to stop. Clearly I have a low tolerance for this thing and was always destined to choose that choice as well. 🙄

    • @OfficialRogue
      @OfficialRogue Před 6 měsíci +4

      ​@@MoonlightMaggie Yes but ask yourself, why does your reasoning stop there anyway? It's wrong to stop there and call it a day.
      "Holding them accountable" or not doing so would be a "choice" i.e something you'd want (to want to..(etc recursively)) to do in itself, which in itself is already uninfluenceable, that line of reasoning goes on infinitely. It's not about "what would we do instead", it's that anything else we do instead, then that too, wasn't chosen or free will.
      It's not about thinking of things in that macro/limited scale of people/society/the justice system etc, we're discussing the general concept of "free will" at its bare-bones, philosophical/logical root.
      What I mean is, in your example about crime etc, it's not about just holding anyone accountable in that sense, it's about that if you do hold them accountable, then you were already always going to, same of the opposite. It's not "should" we or "can" we hold them accountable, because there is no choice there either, "choosing" to hold them accountable or not was inevitable.
      Same with: If you jumped then you were already always going to jump, whether you "chose" to or not, if you were born then you were already always going to be born, etc etc etc, get what I mean? It doesn't even apply just to our experience of free will, but to causality itself.
      The takeaway is pretty much that everything that happened so far was inevitable (and I don't mean in the woo-woo way "everything happens for a reason" because "God chose it"), and that "consequences"/the future/causality is as inevitable as the flow of time itself, you are stuck in your unique experience or "illusion" of the present, some will find great solace in that, some will find terrible distress. 😛 (Both are also inevitable, like everything else - and the illusion of a consequence/event being avoided arises from the fact that its avoidance was also inevitable, etc.)
      So within the confines of this illusion you can "choose" to recognize that since this truth is inevitable, then there is no point worrying or thinking about it too much, because it doesn't change anything for you or your experience, whether it was "predetermined" or not.
      It's just that if you do worry/not believe it,/do anything at all, then that too, was inevitable in its very nature 😅.. but just "choose" not to care, and for all practical purposes, live life the way you would have either way, even while knowing you didn't really choose. I know it feels like a paradox but they aren't mutually exclusive, because one of them is an illusion that arises from the other. The illusion of free will/choice arises from the fact itself there is no free will/choice, which personally doesn't bother me, it's just a logical fact, and a conclusion that you come to when you really think about it enough. I find this beautiful and awe-inspiring on its own.
      So yes, continue to hold criminals accountable etc. not because they are "innately evil" (which is a conclusion you arrived to because you decided to stop there) etc.,
      but because you don't justify "choosing" do something BECAUSE there is free will or not, it's just that it HAPPENS / HAPPENED / WILL HAPPEN *because* there is no free will, that doesn't mean you shouldn't still continue "choosing" just because it's an illusion when you look deep enough... for us it might as well not be an illusion because it's all we will ever experience, there is no need to "adjust" just because you learned this (it's just that if you did adjust, you didn't truly choose that either lol), it is logically and by nature impossible to truly choose, as it breaks all logic and the concept of time and causality itself.
      It doesn't mean there is no beauty in that. To me there IS beauty in that this illusion of choice itself can be born from the fact that there is no choice, almost as an extension of it, and within it we can experience everything as if we all truly chose it, almost going full circle. There is no need to think of it as fake when it is a direct consequence of that initial truth.

  • @dreagen3131
    @dreagen3131 Před 2 lety +306

    I've never been so confused by understanding something in my entire life

    • @dunkhim2809
      @dunkhim2809 Před rokem +10

      Cus we don’t want to understand ☠️😂I’m just as confused 😮‍💨 but I want to understand

    • @tyemaddog
      @tyemaddog Před rokem +4

      He's a perfect definition of a narcissist. When he said "we've already concluded.." blah blah blah, no, "we" haven't concluded anything. We are in control of our lives, period.

    • @kazzajaxon7566
      @kazzajaxon7566 Před rokem +53

      @@tyemaddog Do you know what the word narcissist means?

    • @Sticksonpoint
      @Sticksonpoint Před rokem +17

      @@tyemaddog but we actually are not because what ever is going to happen or what ever ever happened...happened and there's no changing that ever....everything is technically predestined wether you believe it or not.

    • @lVideoWatcherl
      @lVideoWatcherl Před rokem +18

      @@tyemaddog Point me to a single logical mistake in this video, please. Because as it stands, it just seems like you are stubbornly refusing to listen to what was said, not because you actually have any argument to make against the stance (which is, just by the way, utterly impossible, as the logic is completely obviously clear and sound).

  • @nikomartinez6889
    @nikomartinez6889 Před 6 lety +512

    Take a shot every time he says “want”

    • @brandtgill2601
      @brandtgill2601 Před 6 lety +37

      Anika Martinez I'd get alchohol poisoning. And i dont want that.

    • @nihilistnick5094
      @nihilistnick5094 Před 6 lety +17

      Im dead now thanks

    • @Blurple0
      @Blurple0 Před 6 lety +5

      Fuck

    • @brotsky0
      @brotsky0 Před 6 lety +8

      I have crippling depression and have killed myself after that challenge I am now a dead rabbit who cant do nothing but think and I have wifi somehow I think this is hell

    • @Blurple0
      @Blurple0 Před 6 lety +4

      Gabriel Marbordo Kosta well then

  • @erniemathews5085
    @erniemathews5085 Před 8 měsíci

    This was first watched when it was new. In '23 I realized now I think you're right. When I reacted differently to the same situation I had schooled my thinking into being prudent, a big change.

  • @itayspay2
    @itayspay2 Před 3 měsíci +2

    free will is the ability to choose to do what you want. example i want to eat ice-cream but i can choose not to eat ice-cream although i want it.

  • @Jemmainadilemma
    @Jemmainadilemma Před 3 lety +683

    lol this is something i struggled with when i was 15 and i didn’t get why no one else cared about this!! the lack of choice to want something is so important and figuring this out has made me a much less judgemental and empathetic person tbh

    • @jes8253
      @jes8253 Před 3 lety +26

      That’s really interesting to know. Cause it has happened to me also. I’d say that the exact same effect it was caused on you was really caused on me as well. It has made me reflect a lot more than usual about life in general after I started gravitating towards this possibility.

    • @Jemmainadilemma
      @Jemmainadilemma Před 3 lety +62

      @@jes8253 yeah i'd say i used to feel scared about it but now i think it's quite a freeing mindset. i study sociology now which has helped me explore how unhelpful this belief in free will really is to almost everyone - means we think we can judge other people even when we can't relate to their situation at all because we think 'well I would never do that' without having any context. empathy is a great skill and i think we need to remember what it actually means to put yourself in someone else's shoes - it doesn't mean put yourself in their particular situation, it means put yourself in their particular situation within the whole context of their life. rugged individualism has meant we think that's not important somehow and i think without a radical shift in perspective in the very near future the world is going to be totally irreperably fucked soon

    • @jes8253
      @jes8253 Před 3 lety +11

      @@Jemmainadilemma I couldn’t agree more with your words. It’s really fulfilling to get to know there’s still people in the world that has this sort of insight to reflect upon it the way you do. It’s quite funny cause I couldn’t ever imagine I would definitely bump into someone right here on CZcams who shares the same concept as I do and also as accurate as my concept is about this idea. It’s really gratifying! I do think the same, moreover, I still sense that the world unfortunately is more likely to be fucked up as soon as we can’t expect because of individualism.

    • @CuriosityGuy
      @CuriosityGuy Před 3 lety +2

      @@Jemmainadilemma What isn't it a free choice that "I want to prove a point by regaining my free will"? Didn't I freely choose to want one over the other?

    • @Jemmainadilemma
      @Jemmainadilemma Před 3 lety +22

      @@CuriosityGuy well you want to do something to prove a point, but you don't choose to want that, you just want that. The source of the want is the point here - you can't choose to want something. you could explore why you want that but i don't think that would affect what you want

  • @anilmukundan3574
    @anilmukundan3574 Před 4 lety +439

    When free will is defined as "ability to have acted differently", then this is true. The reason most of us feel we have free will is because we subconsciously define free will as "ability to do what you want/desire". Most people are not that concerned that they don't have the ability to choose what they want, or your wants are beyond your control. As long as we can act on those wants we feel that we have free will.

    • @juandelacruz4679
      @juandelacruz4679 Před 3 lety +47

      Then I would say that the term is wrong and it's implications still equivocated. If your will is determined by your "wants" which you aren't in control of, then it's not free, why bother with reusing the term to say something completely different? Specially if we don't redefine it's implications, like moral responsability. If we aren't in control of the desires that motivate our actions, how can we hold people accountable? It would radically change the framework in which we base or social systems, which people seem not so eager to do, which I think is what makes them clinge so hard to using the same term.

    • @Jaymzmiller
      @Jaymzmiller Před 3 lety +72

      What you're describing sounds like "will", not "free will".

    • @bubblegumgun3292
      @bubblegumgun3292 Před 3 lety +1

      what gives us a taste in music, did the universe choose my favorite color, if the universe can choose my favorite color than god can create a soul and if god can't create a soul than the universe can not choose my favorite color and im liberty to do as i wish to do constant battle with the universe

    • @sensibleone3268
      @sensibleone3268 Před 3 lety +2

      This sounds to be very true so although we don't have complete free will the will is still in our character/traits to (choose the things we want)
      So i think in a given moment we definitely have will/free will (based on our character traits) I mean I didn't have to comment here though i did so based on an inner impulse to do so
      Ohh yeah when I say choose the things we want I didn't mean we choose our wants but I meant we have the choice or decision to act on it

    • @daviddeida
      @daviddeida Před 3 lety +16

      @@sensibleone3268 Before you had the impulse to write a comment,that was already set in motion.Then you had the thought I will write a comment.In reality the comment had to happen,you just claim authorship for doing so.There simply is no doer.

  • @ashikadavis
    @ashikadavis Před 6 měsíci +4

    Using the icecream scenario since that's what the video had -
    What if one were to chose between two bowls of vanilla ice cream that had the exact same amount of icecream in it, in the exact same bowls, kept side by side.
    Would that constitute free will since there isnt a 'want' of either one of it in particular?

    • @Rio-zh2wb
      @Rio-zh2wb Před 5 měsíci +7

      But there is. For example, if you’re right-handed, that might make you more likely to grab the bowl on the right. This is an example of a puppet not seeing its strings and falsely concluding that the strings don’t exist.

  • @nano7586
    @nano7586 Před 10 měsíci +4

    I think the question depends on what timespan you're talking about. You can't influence your past, which in the end turns you into what you are. And maybe you can't influence this exact moment because every reactio in the unlimited actio-reactio chain is deterministic. Unless, and this is controversial, there are hidden variables that come from some undetectable dimension that in the end makes up your consciousness and is not influence by anything other than your will.

  • @lucalinadreemur9448
    @lucalinadreemur9448 Před rokem +667

    This is pretty close to how I felt leaving Christianity.
    My family kept talking about my "choice" to stop believing in their God, but I never made any choice regarding that. It simply didn't make sense to me so I didn't believe it. The only "choice" I made was to stop suppressing my own doubtful thoughts which really were becoming extremely overwhelming and upsetting to keep down.

    • @c-fin
      @c-fin Před rokem +37

      Same here. Very similar and I got to the point where my whole “faith” felt fake.

    • @celtictarotreadings333
      @celtictarotreadings333 Před rokem +38

      I feel the same, but the opposite way. I believe in god. I don’t know why, I can’t explain it. I just do. Was never bought up religiously or anything either.

    • @famalourian2463
      @famalourian2463 Před rokem +23

      You can't choose to believe something you don't actually believe.

    • @Where_is_Waldo
      @Where_is_Waldo Před rokem +15

      @@celtictarotreadings333 You're the kind of religious person I like. I personally find myself wanting there to be a god who suits my preference for what I want god to be but I don't want to believe something without knowing it to be true. Since evidence is a matter of demonstrating something through immutable natural laws which produce the same result of the same causes under the same circumstances every time those causes are applied under the same circumstances and since the supernatural as a concept does not rely on immutable natural laws, I can only hope and can't believe since my belief of anything depends on knowing. Thus, I can't help not believing in a god and can't help hoping for a god I would like. I suppose a god could exist who I wouldn't like but I can't hope for that and I can't believe it either. This is why I can't hope for or believe in a god who would punish anyone for not believing in a god as believed by the kind of religious person I don't like... well, that might not be the best way to put it, I should call them the kind of religious person who's beliefs I don't like since their beliefs themselves cause them fear which forces them to believe the beliefs which cause the fear. Anyway, I'm always happy to come across someone like you who just believes in a god because they want to believe.

    • @helenamcginty4920
      @helenamcginty4920 Před rokem

      Ditto.

  • @khorinus7944
    @khorinus7944 Před 4 lety +481

    "Of course we have free will, we have no other choice but to have it" C. Hitchens

    • @573Muhammad
      @573Muhammad Před 4 lety +12

      Brilliant ~Lord Hitchens

    • @shadowzerg
      @shadowzerg Před 4 lety +31

      Of course the exact opposite could be said, “Of course we don’t have free will. We have no choice but not to have it”

    • @shadowzerg
      @shadowzerg Před 4 lety +14

      Jo-Ash Scott Official I had will. I’m not convinced it was “free”

    • @pauljohnson6019
      @pauljohnson6019 Před 4 lety +4

      @Jo-Ash Scott Official You have will- your free will was based on the question regarding free will, which was freely chose to respond- if he didn't respond, you could just as well have asked, did you have free will to not write that comment.

    • @ijarbis187
      @ijarbis187 Před 4 lety +18

      James Walker I think you are missing the irony and true point of the quote. By saying we have free will and we have no choice but to have it is purposely contradictory.

  • @Topazdemonia
    @Topazdemonia Před 5 měsíci +1

    This is one of, if not the most, influential videos I've ever seen

  • @dustinharding8941
    @dustinharding8941 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Love the content. I do think it would've been good for you to explain compatiblism after referencing matt bc that's what he's referring to here. He does understand libertarian free will. I'm sure you already know that, but wanted to put it out there. Thanks again for all your content.

  • @_Helicam_
    @_Helicam_ Před 3 lety +167

    It's simple really, i believe in free will because i don't have a choice.

    • @patrickbertlein4626
      @patrickbertlein4626 Před 3 lety +4

      That's a really good one! And speaks a lot of truth as well. To the best of my knowledge I could say that the belief in free will or not is predetermined. Gazzaniga I believe his name is backs this up, as well as other Neurosciency people.

    • @abeautifuldayful
      @abeautifuldayful Před 3 lety +1

      Oxymoronic, though.

    • @benj766
      @benj766 Před 2 lety +2

      That's a contradiction, you are not freely believing in free will if you don't have a choice. But the thing is you do have a choice

    • @abeautifuldayful
      @abeautifuldayful Před 2 lety +3

      @@benj766 Sure, you have a choice, but it's always determined in the past. A choice is never made of anything but thoughts you already had. Any thoughts you think that are brand new, any responses you can imagine, and all reactions to everything are always old once they happen like the choices they help to make. We live in time like the crest of a wave you cannot ever pin down even if you snap a picture of it because it required time to take making it a wave from the light traveling in the past to build up enough photons collapsing from the quantum light wavelength to capture in the camera. Your brainwaves must behave by quantum physics too.

    • @_Helicam_
      @_Helicam_ Před 2 lety

      @@benj766 Some will argue that stating that there is a point where it supposed to be is pointless.

  • @imverithus1029
    @imverithus1029 Před 2 lety +213

    Whenever I see a video about free will, I have no choice but to watch it

    • @rexlion4510
      @rexlion4510 Před rokem +9

      Sorry you have that compulsion! 😂 When I see a video about free will, I have full range of choice. I watched about 4 minutes of this one, and then I quite watching! I'd heard enough of his nonsense! 🤣

    • @Boris99999
      @Boris99999 Před rokem +19

      @@rexlion4510
      So your “want” wasn’t strong enough and you’ve made a choice based on you not wanting to continue - clearly proving the point of the video here! ^_^

    • @renegadesofanarchy289
      @renegadesofanarchy289 Před rokem +7

      I had no choice but to vote this comment up (and also make this reply.)

    • @renegadesofanarchy289
      @renegadesofanarchy289 Před rokem +3

      @@NousTrapper It might be the case the your reason for doing so is because determinism causes you discomfort, and so you act accordingly to minimise discomfort since we seem to be exclusively motivated to minimise suffering/maximise pleasure.
      Even seeking pain is pretty much always done to minimise it or seek a future pleasure, such as in the experiment of people choose to shock themselves to relieve boredom (choosing a lesser pain to relieve a greater/worse pain)
      Even seeking a meaningful life filled with meaningful experiences is only done to relieve the suffering of meaninglessness.

    • @renegadesofanarchy289
      @renegadesofanarchy289 Před rokem

      @@NousTrapper “Nature has placed mankind under two sovereign masters, pain and pleasure, it is for them alone to point out what we ought to do and well as determine what we shall do. On the one hand the standard of right and wrong and on the other the chain of cause and effect are fastened to their throne. They govern us in everything we do, everything we think, everything we say. Every attempt we make to throw off our subjection will serve but to *demonstrate and confirm* it.”
      - My boy Jeremy Bentham spitting straight facts

  • @troyduplooy5365
    @troyduplooy5365 Před 5 měsíci +4

    I would actually say that the reasons we do anything is actually singular - it is because we want to. Even if we are forced to do something at gunpoint, we still do it because we want something - that something is to survive and continue living.

    • @corndude4172
      @corndude4172 Před 4 měsíci

      I wouldn’t agree with that premise. Imagine you were very sick or broke your legs or had a mental illness and you were bound to your bed temporarily. You would want to get up and be productive more than you wanted to be in bed but you physically couldn’t get out of bed no matter how bad you wanted to because you are forced to be there.

    • @connorallgood0922
      @connorallgood0922 Před 6 dny

      @@corndude4172 You want to stay in bed because you didn't want to mess up your injury or make yourself feel worse.

    • @teloworld
      @teloworld Před 23 hodinami

      no, youre physically restrained meaning that youre being forced to not get up

  • @lovelaughing6215
    @lovelaughing6215 Před 6 měsíci +2

    So well said its basically all my thoughts put together in a video i was never able to explain to ppl why im forced to believe that there is no free choice

    • @donatist59
      @donatist59 Před 5 měsíci

      You would be forced to believe anything.

  • @uahatoxicboi9801
    @uahatoxicboi9801 Před 4 lety +572

    “I have noticed even people who claim everything is predestined, and that we can do nothing to change it, look before they cross the road.”
    ~Stephen Hawking

    • @choco1199
      @choco1199 Před 4 lety +8

      Wait, does that mean they don’t actually believe it is pre-Destin?

    • @robertjusic9097
      @robertjusic9097 Před 4 lety +52

      @@choco1199 they are contradicting themselfes. if they look before they cross the road they have basically reduced their chances of getting hit by a car to 0% meaning they chose their own destiny

    • @vegannegan9652
      @vegannegan9652 Před 4 lety +140

      @@robertjusic9097 or it's just survival instict doing it's work. It's just like animals that try to avoid pain/danger. It has nothing to do with choice.

    • @carsonmcmanus9410
      @carsonmcmanus9410 Před 4 lety +7

      Peter Griffin I’m not being facetious I promise, I’m just curious about the topic. But what about a suicidal person who has those same instincts to avoid pain but walk out in front of a truck. It was there choice no?

    • @toadmann8353
      @toadmann8353 Před 4 lety +103

      @@carsonmcmanus9410 No. This completely ignores the fact that their "want" to walk in front of the truck overrides their "want" to do otherwise. Do you think a suicidal person would choose to want to be suicidal? This is actually a compelling case AGAINST free will.

  • @robsquared2
    @robsquared2 Před rokem +116

    I had to write an essay in high school about free will in the form of destiny. And my answer was basically "we can act like we have free will because we can't know the future so it doesn't matter."

    • @davidt8087
      @davidt8087 Před rokem +5

      Here's a brain twist. The decision after learning about free will not existing, and then deciding to make an expository video about it, is actually in itself an act of free will.

    • @celtictarotreadings333
      @celtictarotreadings333 Před rokem +39

      @@davidt8087 no because he wanted to. He doesn’t control his wants.

    • @petarpejic1468
      @petarpejic1468 Před rokem +2

      ​@@celtictarotreadings333you are your want so you always do what you want if we remove aĺl the wants are you still here?

    • @kennypowers1945
      @kennypowers1945 Před rokem

      It does tho, had you made the choices to set yourself up for success later. That’s free will

    • @kennypowers1945
      @kennypowers1945 Před rokem

      @@celtictarotreadings333 that’s free will lol. Because he wanted to, he could have chose not to even if wanting to

  • @potrahsel4195
    @potrahsel4195 Před 5 měsíci +1

    You made a great video here explaining how people cannot control their 'wants'.
    I wrote an essay on the Free Will v Determinism debate when I was an undergrad. I came to a conclusion which you may find interesting.
    You see I wasn't happy for the religious lobby to go off and still claim just for themselves the slogan of "Freedom".
    Leave aside that my experience of organised religion didn't give me the impression that religious people were keen on me being free, but freedom is such an attractive concept to 99% of people.
    We all want to be free to walk down the street, free to choose the videos we watch etc.
    The conclusion I came to was that the juxtaposition between freedom and determinism is completely false.
    The answer to whether I have free will when I choose vanilla over chocolate is, yes. And the answer to whether my choice was determined is also, yes.
    Like you may say, at the moment it seems I prefer or WANT vanilla over chocolate.
    The point is that the 'determinant' factors are within me. They are part of what makes me at the current moment.
    You could say that I determined my choice of vanilla.
    To express this in the general case, the causal links in any chain of events that result in someone taking an action are/are within/are part of that person.
    So to suggest that the scientifically identifiable causes for someone's choices means those people lack free will is completely wrong.
    As you say, we really experience feelings of freedom when we are not constrained by external factors.
    There is simply no greater freedom available ... least of all from religious 'authorities' who try to dictate on our thoughts and actions.
    Keep up the great work 👍💪

  • @ProgressIsTheOnlyEvolution
    @ProgressIsTheOnlyEvolution Před 10 měsíci +9

    If there is no free will, there is no YOU

    • @damiensisco6960
      @damiensisco6960 Před měsícem

      Why is that the case?

    • @ProgressIsTheOnlyEvolution
      @ProgressIsTheOnlyEvolution Před měsícem

      @@damiensisco6960 Because you like life is what YOU make!
      You can't make your own body, you can't make a planet or all the things we depend on in it, all you can make is what you make with your will, and if you make nothing there then you are literally NOTHING.

    • @ProgressIsTheOnlyEvolution
      @ProgressIsTheOnlyEvolution Před měsícem

      @@damiensisco6960 Alex is a dumb ass lying hypocrite. He is claiming his actions are predetermined and that he has no free will, but he knows he is lying.
      For who or what has predetermined his actions and behavior? Who has decided for him to be the way that he is?
      He would not say God for he does not believe in God, but it can also not be society for then why would society make him to be one way and me and others to be another way? Besides if society has made Alex, then he should not have a youtube channel as he would have nothing to say other than what he was told by society. Then it is society who should speak not Alex.
      It can also not be Alex's parents, scientists, brits or anyone else. So if you stand with no one who would predetermine Alex's claimed predetermined actions, then there is only one possibility left. And that is that Alex is a liar who just refused to take responsibility for his own actions and inability to control his body or need to be anything but a mindless animal claiming to have no free will.
      But I will give Alex this, Alex is not as dumb as the idiots who follow, agree with and praise Alex.
      But everyone else knows that the only one who can WILL what Alex wants is Alex himself! This should be pretty obvious when you look at the obvious evidence that NO ONE ELSE is like Alex! Alex is unique in his will, even if that will is to be dishonest and stupid!

    • @jamesmiller4184
      @jamesmiller4184 Před měsícem

      @@damiensisco6960 If you were to possess requisite intelligence so-as-to, you would KNOW without having to ask.

    • @pythondrink
      @pythondrink Před měsícem

      Yh if you define _you_ in a bizarre way, I guess so

  • @almostcanadian9495
    @almostcanadian9495 Před 6 lety +381

    Well I'm terrified now, thank you Alex.

    • @vitezu
      @vitezu Před 6 lety +17

      AlmostCanadian
      It gets better with time

    • @ElCatrinMuerto
      @ElCatrinMuerto Před 6 lety +1

      Lol

    • @Luftgitarrenprofi
      @Luftgitarrenprofi Před 6 lety +28

      That fear only lasts for awhile. Once you get used to it, the bad occurances in life become quite alot easier to bear.

    • @dylanwight5764
      @dylanwight5764 Před 6 lety +5

      Why are you terrified? It is out of your control. You can either accept or reject it, but neither stance will affect the outcome in any predictable way. So why worry? if it's going to happen, it's going to happen.
      This is also the same argument that renders faith pointless. Faith is belief without evidence, yet the only reason belief can be validated is if there is evidence. Thus, faith is a waste of time since without evidence, then it is equally likely that something will happen as it is that something will not happen. This is the problem of non-falsifiable claims. Either it _will_ or it will _not_. Belief nor faith can change this.

    • @almostcanadian9495
      @almostcanadian9495 Před 6 lety +9

      Dylan Wight Well that's completely off topic, but I agree. But just because something is true doesn't make it comforting. Just because something is out of my control doesn't stop me from finding it unsettling, no matter how much I would like to pretend it does

  • @Broctis
    @Broctis Před 5 lety +323

    Actually, the only reason you'll do anything is because you want to. Being forced to do something has a want of survival or the avoidance of punishment behind it, unless your hand is being moved by someone else physically.

    • @heckingbamboozled8097
      @heckingbamboozled8097 Před 5 lety +28

      But do you really "want" to in the sense that it's something you choose truly on your own behalf? For example, if you buy a soda or something at a store "because you want to", it could realistically be for a variety of factors. For one thing, you could be thirsty while also holding a disposition towards sweeter drinks. That would naturally cause you to gravitate towards the sugary drink. If you weren't thirsty, then it was probably a craving - something you don't necessarily choose to have that holds a significant amount of power over deciding what you buy. If you had a craving and instead got water since it was healthier, there were prior decisions already dictating that choice as well. Free will is essentially impossible to prove, in reality, since if you go back far enough and with enough detail, every single one of your actions could likely be telegraphed. Even without this consideration, the concept of free will in and of itself is so nebulous that it's genuinely hard for our brains to conceptualize. That's just my thought on it anyway

    • @michaelcolenso5078
      @michaelcolenso5078 Před 5 lety +19

      I was just thinking of this. You can’t be forced to do something unless whatever is forcing you has a consequence for you not doing it in which you do it because you want to avoid the consequence. I didn’t think of your hand being physically moved by something else though. Interesting point.

    • @lepetitchat123
      @lepetitchat123 Před 5 lety +9

      That's why I think there will be anarchy in a lawless society. Most people don't break the law simply because they don't want to be punished, not because they are well-intentioned and well-behaved citizens. Humans are not superior, civilised moral beings. We're worse than animals.

    • @Broctis
      @Broctis Před 5 lety +1

      @@lepetitchat123 Would you murder someone if you couls?

    • @lepetitchat123
      @lepetitchat123 Před 5 lety +1

      @@Broctis If I could get away with it, yes. But perhaps I couldn't do it myself, I am too chicken. I will hire someone else to do it lol

  • @BlackWolf-uk2yb
    @BlackWolf-uk2yb Před 9 měsíci +1

    I came to this conclusion many years ago but could not express it as well as you have here. Whenever I have this conversation I usually resort to asking the person to give me one example of a 'choice' they believe they made and unravel it with them to demonstrate that their 'choice' will have ALWAYS come from a 'reason' and that the 'reason' never originates with them or something they 'chose'!

    • @aidanm.655
      @aidanm.655 Před 9 měsíci

      The ability to rationalize through choices and decide which one isn’t always a result of desire. This video would also disprove things we know exist like consciousness, rationality, intelligence, etc.
      The literal definition of consciousness is the ability to parse through desires and pick one independent of emotion. You may really really want something, but also know it’s bad for you. What decides what you do? You do. If both desires are equal, how is it that anything happens? The answer is that your ability to rationalize and make a decision INDEPENDENT of both desires is what makes the decision.

    • @BlackWolf-uk2yb
      @BlackWolf-uk2yb Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@aidanm.655 None of those change anything. For example you state "but also Know its bad for you". How did you arrive at the knowledge that it's bad for you? Also Consciousness, Rationality and Intelligence are capacities you were born with. In other words things you were given but didn't 'chose'. So does somebody born with a lesser intelligence, as per your example, have fewer 'choices'?
      "The literal definition of consciousness is the ability to parse through desires and pick one independent of emotion" - all you are describing here is the lived experience of the 'program' running (what we call our consciousness) that, from our perspective makes is 'seem' like we are making a choice. Being 'aware' of the program running does not effect the output.
      " If both desires are equal, how is it that anything happens?" -what you are describing here is like what happens to humans when faced with too many apparent 'options'. Many do find it impossible to 'chose' in such instances and the Operating System becomes distressed. For those that do there will ALWAYS be a reason why they 'chose' one above any of the others.
      The closest it will 'feel' you can get to 'breaking' determinism is the use of a randomizer. i.e. Flipping a coin. Since you will have then removed 'yourself' from the decision making part. But I will leave you to consider "Whose 'Free Will' is being implemented here?"; "Is it Free Will" and "Does this really disprove determinism?" It really does help when considering this subject to think of ourselves like a computer program that is so complex that it does not only take direct inputs from its immediate environment (via the senses) but also uses 'data' gathered during its runtime (lived experiences). We are only doing what we were 'programmed' to do from birth.

    • @scytherzilla
      @scytherzilla Před 9 měsíci +1

      Good explanation@@BlackWolf-uk2yb

    • @habe1717
      @habe1717 Před 8 měsíci

      @@aidanm.655 The greatest desire wins. That's all it ever is. When are you ever making a choice that isn't of desire?
      "You may really really want something, but also know it’s bad for you. " Your desire for being healthy was greater than your desire to want to do that thing.

  • @deputydrip4520
    @deputydrip4520 Před 6 měsíci +4

    I would argue, that to a certain degree we can control the degrees or intensity to which we desire what we “want” across multiple dimensions because we organize those “wants” into a hierarchy and inter connect them with one another. As we change different areas in our lives, we rearrange the hierarchy, and shift multiple items based on the initial change. For instance, the decision to go to the gym is not only a shift in want, it is a shift in value structure, and therefore you’ll shift multiple other “wants” within your hierarchy of wants in order to align yourself with the new value. I do agree that changes like this are rare and take conscious effort, but we are most definitely capable of shifting our wants. I think a better argument for free will would be that the future is already predetermined, and therefore we will always fall prey to the future.

    • @leonardo7642
      @leonardo7642 Před 5 měsíci +5

      I agree that you can change your "wants" by changing your cognitive value structure. But you will change this structure because you want to do it. And then you will try very hard and think about it and question it, because you want to do so. In the end you have changed your "wants" by using your wants or being forced to by a therapist or someone/something else. In no point you are free of your "wants". At least according to Alex ;)

    • @lewisburton1852
      @lewisburton1852 Před 2 měsíci +1

      This is what I am currently doing: diving deep into this topic and changing my wants and desires. My desire to sit on the couch or be on the computer is stronger than my desire to go to the gym. As soon as the thought of going to the gym arises in my mind, I ask myself why my desire to work out and improve my appearance and well-being is less compelling. Clearly, one option involves more effort but offers long-term benefits, while the other requires less effort and provides immediate gratification.
      Without delving too deeply into our reward system, I aim to make my desire to work out stronger than my inclination to sit idle. The desire to desire something is potent, whether we believe in free will or not. This shift in priorities is the most powerful step I've taken to accomplish more.

  • @OatmealTheCrazy
    @OatmealTheCrazy Před 2 lety +382

    I think you can actually combine "want to or have to" even further into just "want to"
    Even if you have a gun to your head or you have a boss threatening to fire you, the pressure only works if you want to be alive or have whatever luxuries the job affords you more than you want to do whatever they're demanding.
    Put someone suicidal or someone who has been on the fence about taking a vow of poverty into those situations and it's pretty obvious how those change the scales.
    In effect "being forced to" is just adding one weight to one end of your scales deciding what to do, often an inordinately heavy one, but isn't necessarily a sole determinant.

    • @Seapatico
      @Seapatico Před 2 lety +26

      This is fully correct, as far as I can tell

    • @aaronmitchell7161
      @aaronmitchell7161 Před 2 lety +15

      But In a physical matter, no.

    • @Elisha_the_bald_headed_prophet
      @Elisha_the_bald_headed_prophet Před rokem +13

      @@actualwafflesenjoyer in judicial situations the distinction is never that clear-cut. E.g. self-defense and 'acting under duress' have to be proportionate in order to be legitimate. E.g. agreeing to kill a third party because someone threatens with releasing your naked baby pics hardly seems proportionate. It's up to a judge/jury to decide. But as long as questions of moral responsibility (which only exist on a societal-artificial level) are out of the way, both 'have to' and 'want to' seem to describe deliberate action under desires and constraints

    • @ashleystrout6651
      @ashleystrout6651 Před rokem +26

      I think "being forced to" would be more akin to someone physically forcing you, e.g. being pushed off a stage.

    • @tbdnameyea8070
      @tbdnameyea8070 Před rokem +13

      @@ashleystrout6651 I agree with Ashley, and I think the distinction is important for this reason. You did not "want to" be pushed off the stage (presumably), but you were. You did not "want to" shoot the man while you were sleeping, but someone moved your finger to the trigger of a gun they put in your hand.

  • @henderson1722
    @henderson1722 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Argument 1) We mustn't have control of every factor that influences our actions, but rather, escape them.
    Argument 2) This just isn't true... I can stop wanting ice-cream with disciplined thought.

  • @matthewkopp2391
    @matthewkopp2391 Před 5 měsíci +2

    It is not “total free will”. Why would this be the case?
    Free will exists, but only in regards to the limited fragments of reality that we are conscious of. If we are not conscious of the parameters of reality, we have no free will.
    We can not judge our free will based on winding back the clock. We can only judge it based on our current circumstances and only in regards to the fragments of reality we see multiple choices of action.
    We can immediately test our free will, by choosing to wiggling our index finger or not doing so. That is a simplistic reduction of parameters which most can do by choice.
    We can follow a script provided to us, thereby circumventing our own reflexive script.
    Free will exists but it is narrower than most realize.

  • @babbisp1
    @babbisp1 Před 6 lety +239

    *I had no choice but to like this video :)*

    • @FancyGonkBoi
      @FancyGonkBoi Před 6 lety +2

      same

    • @syntaxerror8955
      @syntaxerror8955 Před 6 lety +4

      That's a very good point, despite the joke, because you didn't yourself decide what you like. Your genes and experiences did. You only decided to express that feeling of liking. And why am I writing this? The point is that we are incredibly advanced "machines", and whatever we think we decide is always within the framework of our genetic programming. Thus, free will only exists within certain limits. Another argument against free will is that people understanding the consequences make stupid or "wrong" choices that severely harm them. If they truly had complete free will, that wouldn't happen. One example is me writing this, despite being better off in health and freshness tomorrow if I were sleeping now.

    • @theragingcyclone
      @theragingcyclone Před 6 lety +6

      Only stones and rocks and inanimate matter have no choice. You had the choice to not like this video but you have already been convinced that whatever Alex says is intelligent so let me like this video blindly without using your 10 brain cells to contemplate on what he says.

    • @seignee
      @seignee Před 6 lety

      babbisp1 o h s h it

    • @mariodiblasio8058
      @mariodiblasio8058 Před 5 lety +1

      babbisp: Or, you chose to like it :) God bless you.

  • @djg11693
    @djg11693 Před 3 lety +292

    This reminds me of Eastern religious philosophy, specifically the concept of being enslaved by one's desires(wants) and the idea that true freedom comes from not having desires(wants). The Mahabharata depicts many ascetics living lifestyles free from desire. The desire to not desire is a desire itself. It is extremely difficult to achieve a desireless state of existence.

    • @dionysusnow
      @dionysusnow Před 3 lety +94

      It's not difficult to achieve a desire-less state , it's called death.

    • @rightonrightonrighton
      @rightonrightonrighton Před 3 lety +36

      @@dionysusnow based

    • @ems7623
      @ems7623 Před 3 lety +7

      @@dionysusnow This is likely why religions like Jainism have elaborate death rituals connected directly to shedding yourself of your connections to the material (and social) world.

    • @msaag5490
      @msaag5490 Před 3 lety +29

      Doesn't that simply mean that those ascetics are simply ruled by their desire to not want desires? Or maybe that's the ultimate state, where they've eliminated so much of their worldly desire, that the only desire left is to maintain the desire to not want any other desires.

    • @giftenjoyer3664
      @giftenjoyer3664 Před 3 lety +1

      Also Schopenhauer talks about this.

  • @BearTheBearyBearestBear
    @BearTheBearyBearestBear Před 8 měsíci +9

    As a philosopher i have a deep problem with the "wants just are" idea. You didn't pursue that and it makes me have no reason to believe your argument. Where do wants come from? Why do wants change, often outside of our own consciousness? Why is a new want to change your want a pre determined factor and not an instance of me introducing something out of free will? I just feel that this is a bad argument.

  • @HellBornRoadCrew
    @HellBornRoadCrew Před 8 měsíci +2

    Very interesting take! If you still hold this position, Alex, I'd be happy if you consider the following point.
    You argue, that you can't choose to prefer vanilla over chocolate, so it's not a free act, but a result of desire. And even if you choose vanilla anyway, it's because your want to go against your preference is stronger than this preference itself, it just is. So every change in action depends on a new want which replaces all others but is not chosen itself.
    However, I think this argument makes an implicit assumption on the relationship of acts and wants. The assumption is, that every act/choice absolutely and unilaterally depends on a reason/want and is nothing more than the realisation of its cause (reason/want). In fact, in this perspective the concepts of act and want collapse into the want: the act is nothing more than the result of the (unfree) want. This framing isn't necessary however if you consider a relationship of interdependence between them and not of causality, which is possible if you analyse them logically/conceptually and not in the way of a physical cause-effect-relationship. For example: not only does the act depend on the want, the want also depends on the act; only the act causes the want to be true. The freedom of the act confirms a specific chosen want. The dependence of the act on the want is only possibly because the act is free, not in opposition to its freedom ("freedom is the recognition of necessity", to put it out of context). So you have to replace the dualistic attribution of want to necessity and act to freedom by a dialectical union.
    Another argument in this line: The want is not before or hidden behind the act but at the same time or after it, it is retroactively determined by meaning making. This makes sense if you consider that the cause of the act does not necessarily lie only in the want but in the social, ie in the giving and taking of reasons for actions/choices. The reasons however are overdetermined, open to interpretation and can change retroactively. Of course, a formal want, a placeholder so to speak, always has to be assumed in discourse for an action. But in this perspetive, considering act and want as logically interdependent and not unilaterally determined, we can imagine acts as freely posited, open to be reasoned for.
    I'd be curious for your thoughts on that!

  • @steakismeat177
    @steakismeat177 Před 5 lety +407

    Of course we have free will. We’ve no choice on the matter

    • @ClassicRock1973
      @ClassicRock1973 Před 5 lety +17

      No freewill. You don't choose your wants. It's that simple.

    • @steakismeat177
      @steakismeat177 Před 5 lety +35

      Alan Lloyd I was quoting hitchens. Don’t think he believed in it, but he did make a very apt way of debunking it.

    • @ingrima4220
      @ingrima4220 Před 5 lety +41

      I see what you unwilligly did there

    • @mariodiblasio8058
      @mariodiblasio8058 Před 5 lety +7

      William Esping: Absolutely William; we have no choice in possessing free will as a created member of the human race; the choice that we have is whether and when we will use it or not. God bless you.

    • @deltanovember1672
      @deltanovember1672 Před 5 lety +7

      Mario DiBlasio 🤣

  • @sans3722
    @sans3722 Před 5 lety +200

    After this video “want” doesn’t sound like a word anymore

  • @retinfai
    @retinfai Před 8 dny

    Really liked the video :)
    I agree with your characterisation that drives every action. You either submit to your desires, or you submit to your conscience. Where desire is the same as wants, and conscience is something like what you believe you should do (which is a separate issue).
    To reframe the example, those who force themselves to the gym submit to their conscience, which has them stay healthy, while the person who eats junk food submits to their desires.
    We can imagine a spectrum between the desire and the conscience. It is my opinion that "free will" is the grappling between your desire and your conscience. And you exercise your free will in this manner for every decision you make. Do you go to the gym, or do you have a lazy day? The grappling between your wants and what you believe you should do, is in my opinion free will. Whatever action you end up taking is simply an expression of the free will.

  • @aruserios7632
    @aruserios7632 Před 6 měsíci +1

    This is completely sophomoric. It's very reminiscent of when I was studying philosophy and discussing free will versus determinism 50 years ago. This debate (used loosely) goes back over two thousand years and it is still going on today. It is essentially the same people doing the arguing: philosophers, would-be philosophers, other academics, and students who think it matters. Alex's arguments are nothing new; they are only repackaged and reformulated old arguments that rely on definition and faulty logic to come up with an argument that supports a preconceived bias. I sometimes _choose_vanilla ice cream, sometimes strawberry, sometimes chocolate; I defy anyone to back into my bank of experiences, my upbringing, my genetics...and show me the path or train of connections that determines each of those decisions. But those are only my choices today; last year I preferred Chocolate Mint and Rocky Road. Anti-free willers, like Alex, might respond, "That proves you don't have the free will to choose Spumoni; you are determined to keep switching your choices, excepting Spumoni, and can do nothing else." Common sense (highly underrated by people like Alex) and observation tell us that people make decisions every day based on the facts at hand and the application of rational, conscious thought. This is not to say that many, perhaps most, of the choices we make, are patterned by our experience and other factors-this is necessary because we cannot have an internal debate on our every action-nor is it to say that many of these patterned choices were not at one time choices in themselves. This all reminds me of the legendary Foo Foo bird that is reputed to fly only once because it flew in ever smaller circles until it flew up its ass and disappeared. Philosophy is often like a Foo Foo bird.

  • @nikopjotr2953
    @nikopjotr2953 Před 4 lety +203

    I was talking to my friends about we not having free will, i was immediatly in the 'evil person' category haha.

    • @azzamorrie
      @azzamorrie Před 3 lety +4

      He was thinking freely to say what he said I just disprove and freewill still stands no way out of it

    • @jeremygibson565
      @jeremygibson565 Před 3 lety

      It’s not evil to be easily confused

    • @JamesRichardWiley
      @JamesRichardWiley Před 3 lety

      Your friends do not believe their god is omnipotent.

    • @uvwuvw-ol3fg
      @uvwuvw-ol3fg Před 3 lety +3

      Looks like inherent optimism bias and terror management theory always helps regardless of ideologies such as antinatalism based on consent.

    • @jeffbguarino
      @jeffbguarino Před 3 lety +5

      Free will is in the realm of quantum mechanics so the Cosmic Skeptic is wrong. Since if you had no free will and were just an observer in your head and had no control of the rest of your brain, your brain is then like a computer doing things. And it is like you are just watching a movie play out. Your brain apparently gives you notification on how to feel, like when you want something. So why is this computer asking about free will ? It has no consciousness so would not ask this question. Therefore there must be free will and you and your brain are connected and you are conscious. A mechanical computer would not ask questions about free will and consciousness. So since we are really very complicated mechanical computers and we are asking about free will and consciousness, must mean these things are real. Somehow in quantum physics this happens. There are fields, electron, proton, light, everything has a field , even human beings.

  • @billyrossjapan
    @billyrossjapan Před 5 lety +181

    So 'Free Will' should really be termed 'Linear Choice', then?

    • @jadimatic1096
      @jadimatic1096 Před 4 lety +17

      Not necessarily since as he mentioned it is indeed possible for you to make different choices, but ultimately what lead to those choices isn't really in your control

    • @brandonbaza1639
      @brandonbaza1639 Před 4 lety +1

      So what would be a more appropriate term then?

    • @Food5Thought
      @Food5Thought Před 4 lety +5

      @@brandonbaza1639 Maybe "influenced (by known and unknown factors) choice"

    • @theprincessesjules5879
      @theprincessesjules5879 Před 4 lety +4

      Veggies for Thought not really choice either. More like “Influenced Doing/Happening”

    • @JiM-SWEET-art
      @JiM-SWEET-art Před 4 lety +1

      I agree that humans have labeled what IS happening with an insufficient term.

  • @mindfulskills
    @mindfulskills Před rokem +1

    The fact that one can superimpose a scenario of infinite regress upon any action proves only that language is characterized by this infinitely recursive quality. It doesn't necessarily follow that language itself is a perfect mirror of the structure of reality from which we can deduce ultimate truth.
    The Buddhist teaching of "two truths" is probably a more practical approach to this question. There's the "truth" of our everyday experience, and "ultimate truth" which transcends human senses and reason. This accommodates both the admission of ignorance AND the acknowledgement of the choices before us on THIS plane of existence as free choices that result in either suffering or wellbeing for ourselves and the world around us. The appearance of free choices freely made accords with our deepest intuitions, and allows us to experience accountability, learning, personal transformation and social progress.

  • @ZaryasBestFriend
    @ZaryasBestFriend Před měsícem +1

    I can't save this to a playlist. Would love to.

  • @haleynellis8874
    @haleynellis8874 Před 4 lety +60

    This reminds me of a weird thought that's popped into my head a couple times...
    "It couldn't have turned out any differently, because if it could've it would've."

    • @reda29100
      @reda29100 Před 4 lety +2

      I'm no expert but I think it has nothing to do with free will but you're speaking of possibility of different outcomes (my expression, not a real term).
      Let's take the ideas that pop up in your head be called made up ideas, as in comparison to reading that water is liquid and thinking of water as liquid (constructed, extracted by communication E.C., non-genuine) ideas.
      I THINK we're speaking of EC ideas, the ones we, allegedly, consciously construct, not the made up ones, which I have no explanation for.

    • @TheNightWatcher1385
      @TheNightWatcher1385 Před 4 lety +3

      It really could’ve though. Due to the randomness of particles’ behavior, if the universe was rewinded to the beginning to play again, we’d get a vastly different result. Though there are likely some structures that are inevitable.

    • @reda29100
      @reda29100 Před 4 lety +2

      @@TheNightWatcher1385 I think, not authorized tho,
      1- deep in the most minute scale, if there is a randomness in the process then the possibility of a different outcome than what we have now is definitely present. What I mean includes if particles popping behaviour in and out of nowhere is literally random, then that could very well indicate a random outcomes if the uni were to rewind again.
      2- if the laws and contants (gravity, forces, electro, maybe even matter if there were other particles similar to electrons and protons) have behaved differently then we would have different outcomes.
      Otherwise, I think, had the uni been rewinded and if the laws have been identical and the randomness is non-existent (which is something hard to prove by experimenting on every place, planet and black hole to test the validity of matter/space/fiber-stuff determinism and predicting every single instance with the properties of space, time and mass -excuse the metaphor- of the presence of matter there) until then, wait
      I might sound religious there but objectively speaking, we couldn't yet prove the non-existence of consciousness, everything we know is based on the likely possibility of dependence on neural networks. Such inductive argument might not be true as, as far as I know, we know nothing about consciousness. All we know is brain activity.
      I'm not saying there is a soul because consciouness is so mysterious that we can't explain yet. All I'm saying is we have no idea and we could base assumptions on this possibility.
      I don't say I believe in free will certainly, what I'm saying is the arguments of free will non-existence are still not 100% conclusive.
      I'm not sure if there is a part of us (allegedly that we are a distinct part of the world) that is not dependent entirely on the material interactions. I mean there is no reason for us to do good to each other and yet we do! We could be killing eachother over territories yet we feel the deep urge of loving each other.
      I wanna hug every other person. I don't want to think of them as junk space-time-matter that magically surfs the space-time continuum. I wanna shake hands with aliens. I wanna see the last bit of conscious being enjoying his/her/whatever gender "they" call themselves to the last moment they live it. I wanna preach the morality of no-suffering to every conflicting conscious being. Because the other possibility of only material world (speaking of conscious beings, not dieties) is utterly terrifying. A sadistic authority could rise one day and have a grip over the whole humanity and in his thinking, there is no difference between life and death at all!

    • @TheNightWatcher1385
      @TheNightWatcher1385 Před 4 lety +2

      Reda Ali Personally, I believe the brain and the mind (consciousness) are related, but distinct things. I believe the brain is largely automated and runs our day to day lives on auto pilot, but the mind is the “quality control” of a decision, if that makes sense.
      So the brain is like an automated assembly line. It does its thing when left to do so, but a line manager (the mind) can stop the process momentarily to check for quality and give their stamp of approval.
      I think consciousness is present in the brain, but that it doesn’t rely on the brain to actually exist, I feel there’s more to it than that. To me, consciousness is more likely to be a quantum event and not necessarily a physical one (unless you consider quantum events to be physical phenomena).
      We forget that our brain isn’t our entire nervous system. It runs around our whole body. It’s curious that sometimes when someone receives an organ donation, that recipient begins to show personality traits that were present in the donor, such as food preferences or general personality.

    • @reda29100
      @reda29100 Před 4 lety +2

      @@TheNightWatcher1385 you're right.
      I share your opinion of modes of operation of 'mind' as auto-pilot and active decision making. I heard many arguments about controlling someone's arbitrary decision like moving a hand or pressing a button. While scientests have done some experiments of predicting when someone would do such arbitrary action, and also the presence of consciousness on actions, aka hypnosis, while still having the same brain activity, and the similar subconscious acts are very variant like preferring a food or flavor over the other. While genetics could, and very likely do, play a huge rule in dictating how sensitive I am towards anxiety and what category of games I enjoy, (which are once again subconscious; I don't choose to like a food. I have been pre-programmed to like this taste and would be, I expect, very difficult to change the physical part of me that changes my taste. I want to remind you of the 'subconscious' part of our actions that we are all aware of) that still doesn't explain how I find the urge (automatic response) of wanting to laugh when I hear a joke that I understand while still holding myself (2 wants. Which one do you prefer more?). Like I find the two wants, forces, speaking in Greek style, are present both at the same time, albeit that whichever weighed more to you, you would choose. And let me be clear about this: a conscious being could either have a reason to do so or not, and in either case it's a lost case due to 'you want to'.
      The part where daily life free will means when you allegedly intentionally attempt to strike a pedestrian with your car instead of applying the brakes. Let's ignore the moral part while holding into the social aspect of it.
      Assume you have 2 wants: to kill the pedestrian, and to steal him.
      And you have 2 wants-not: social demeaning, and law prosecution. Assume also you have no moral restrictions as killing him is of no psychological downsides, only social ones.
      Coincidentally, the wants on one side and the wants-not are on another; there could be option A with 2 wants and one want-not, option B with 3 wants ..., but atill the wants-not are inherently want by definition (want not to).
      So, where my alleged free will comes into the picture is when I *evaluate* the options, in this case, only two options, run him over, or apply brakes. There could be a situation where I could talk with someone and have A) talk gently, B) use some offensive language, C) agitate a friend with a statement to catch their support into my argument, D) punch him in the face... So it's not like only black and white choice that I "could" choose. These options have the high likelihood of resulting the mentioned outcomes (2 wants for A and 2 wants-not for B). But remember that these outcomes are in many cases exclusive: you are unlikely to kill him, steal him while still escaping the police and social demeaning unless you're that Dostoevsky's novel character to get it all. So you are highly unlikely, let's assume the impossibility hence, of gathering different options' outcomes, aka options' outcomes' exclusivity.
      The situation at hand is you could either choose A, B, C, ... or N. What do you do then? You simply *evaluate* the outcomes' (both benefits and downsides. And for simplicity let's assume the certainty of these outcomes benefits and downsides to eliminate the probablistic aspect of uncertainty). The question now becomes: do you value X and Y more than P and Q? These are your wants, true, but it comes down to what values weigh to you more than others. Money, knowledge, morality, social class, civil prosperity? I think here it could need some compromises regarding your wants against public good where we should draw the line between the want and freedom to take a decision. You could sacrifice you wants and leave them for something else, like future reward. Even though you don't want to leave this choice, you did have the capability to choose or not choose it (you could value the outcomes more than your wants and sacrifice your wants for unwanted outcomes). It could reach to a moral or public good standard where someone would only sacrifice their wants for others' benefits. The difference here is in the future case, the benefit would still reach you afterall; while in public good it would highly unlikely benefit you, at least in the short term, to leave your parking lot for someone else that needs to park closer. I'm not speaking about morality in specific, rather how we would sacrifice our benefits for others even when we know that the odds of benefitting are not on our favor. True, generally, we are acting for a better life of us all, stemming from a beneficiary prospective, but still based on basis of what you want more than the other. And if the better good requires sacrificing one for the whole then so be it. Evolutionarily or not, that gives my life its meaning. Is it free will? Yes because there are other wants. Unless someone considers any want to be decisive to one's decision then even choosing not to follow it stems from that. It's a lost cause anyway!
      I can almost remember no argument regarding the 'conscious' (carefully using the non-scientific term of conscious as I 'm still not sure of my opinion) part but many arguments on the auto-pilot part. An aspect that is highly exploited by psychological biases and subsoncious manipulation in advertisements and giving people the imoression that "I feel I'm winning in the casino just because everything is suggesting that even tho I rationally know the odds are totally not in my favor and it's totally randomly-base rather than skill-based. Don't get me wrong, we don't need to embrace some facts as certainty of death or the possibility of my partner cheating on me but these tendancies should be given and informed to the agent rather than exploiting them against him/her.

  • @quinnmccay488
    @quinnmccay488 Před 4 lety +98

    This video made “want” stop sounding like a word.

    • @charthom
      @charthom Před 4 lety +3

      Then you should try saying ''ought'' after watching his video on objective morality. ;-p

    • @jeffbguarino
      @jeffbguarino Před 3 lety

      He is wrong , I have written the explanations elsewhere in the comments. If you analyze any word to death , it loses meaning and we live in a quantum world. He is stuck in the classical world. Quantum physics has observers and measurement and quantum states that are completely unknowable and uncontrollable.

    • @breasonable4343
      @breasonable4343 Před rokem

      @@jeffbguarino expand please

  • @Rodrigo-tk2fm
    @Rodrigo-tk2fm Před měsícem

    Brilliant! Thank you

  • @eensio
    @eensio Před 6 měsíci

    Splendid presentation: if I am forced to do something, it does not affect my desires. We would like to feel that our feelings are free, because we would like to be autonomous beings.
    But it is impossible to feel something, which we do not feel.

  • @theconversation9103
    @theconversation9103 Před 2 lety +85

    I always thought of free will as the ability to interrupt myself from impulsive action

    • @Jimarillion
      @Jimarillion Před 2 lety +51

      Because you wanted to interrupt impulsive actions. And there are reasons why you wanted to. Character traits I guess.

    • @merbst
      @merbst Před rokem +6

      I thank my attention deficit disorder for helping me to enunciate my lack of free will when I threw that rock hitting my bullying physical education teacher square between the eyes for teasing me about not being eligible to try out to be a baseball pitcher on that fateful day of 1990.
      The principal didn't buy it, but I remembered ever after the truth that I have no free will, nor do any other of my fellow humans.

    • @andsalomoni
      @andsalomoni Před rokem +1

      More precisely, free will is about the ability to interrupt from COMPULSIVE action. if you are aware, you can do it, free will goes together with awareness.

    • @mattmcdonald7112
      @mattmcdonald7112 Před rokem

      That definition of free will is literally the reason for living, even if its not truly free.

  • @AirIsntAyotuber
    @AirIsntAyotuber Před rokem +76

    “You can only do what you want” is oddly empowering

    • @rl7012
      @rl7012 Před rokem +9

      Not really when he also adds that you have no control over what you want.

    • @antoniofarina716
      @antoniofarina716 Před rokem +4

      ​@@rl7012 but why would you control what you want? Why would you decide to want to jump onto a train track?

    • @betamass3803
      @betamass3803 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@rl7012We don't have any control to what we want because there's a reason behind why we want this why we want that as long as reason exists we can't have absolute true free will free from everything.

    • @rl7012
      @rl7012 Před 4 měsíci

      @@antoniofarina716 You can't control what you want, you can only control what you do about it.

    • @rl7012
      @rl7012 Před 4 měsíci

      @@betamass3803 Without reason how could life and the universe exist?

  • @NanosoftRussia
    @NanosoftRussia Před 6 měsíci +1

    Strongest argument for free will, is it's definition. Will contains the concept of "want" "desire" - will.

  • @eduardocarvalho2517
    @eduardocarvalho2517 Před 6 měsíci +2

    You are free to do what you want, but not free to choose what you want.
    Schopenhauer

  • @dogmalogy3666
    @dogmalogy3666 Před 5 lety +121

    Dear Alex, Free will is an overcomplicated concept because of all the religious and societal baggage that word got saddled with. The problem at its core is the ability to decide between, say, two choices A or B, and whether the choice made is predictable or not.
    Let’s look at all constituents of that situation.
    1. Input data.
    2. A brain, that makes the decision.
    3. Output choice: A or B.
    Let’s start with the brain first. Our brains are probability calculating engines. The Brain is programmed from the very beginning of the formation of the first neural cell, until the brain’s death. The brain also comes with preprogrammed models to drive various functions and emotions, obtained through evolution and environment.
    The brain contains a model of the world that is influenced by every input it receives through its various sensors. This model is shaped and reshaped throughout its life as the input data is received by the brain. Input data could take many forms
    - From touch, vision, sound, taste, smell, etc.
    - To chemicals such as hormones, whether from your own body, or your mother’s body during pregnancy, or environment, etc.
    - There are also meta Input Data that could influence the model such as language, emotions, the experience of others, past experience, observations, learning, etc.
    - Input Also could take the form of societal norms, rules and/or regulations, shame, love, hate, etc.
    Let us assume that we have a system of Input data and a brain model such as:
    - We can provide a very precise and perfectly known input data set.
    - Also, we can provide a very precise and perfectly known brain and brain model starting point.
    - Let’s also assume that system, if provided a choice between A or B, that A would have a higher probability to be selected by that system, hence that system will choose A.
    Now, the people who would say that we have free will, argue that even though the system is predisposed to choosing A, that system could choose B instead.
    People who would say that we don’t have free will, argue that the system will choose A no matter what. And we don’t have a choice.
    For that system to choose B instead of A, would mean that there is an input data condition that we did not account for, hence the input data set is not perfect or complete, which violate the assumption. Hence, we don’t have free will.
    In my opinion, the reason people get confused about this illusion of free will is that the probability calculating engine (our brains) is constantly and recursively being updated by the experiences we have on a second by second basis. Also, the set of input data into the brain is large and complex, not to mention the combinatorial factor of how all that data is processed in our brains. This is, as referred to it by Data Science as an AI-complete problem.
    The decision tree is vast, but not infinite. If we have a big enough computer (let’s go crazy, the size of the sun) with “perfect” input data set and “perfect” model of that brain at that point, we can predict the outcome and choice.
    So, if that is the case, then anyone who will commit a crime, could claim that she has no choice and it was predestined, yes?
    No! one of the inputs in the input data set is societal norms, rules, regulation, etc. this is another variable that could shape our world model in the brain. So, if this probability calculating engine decided on B instead of A (where B happened to be illegal) they will suffer the consequences.
    But more importantly for this discussion, there is an input condition in this brain’s life that made it set low priority or low weight to the legal and societal rules, and for that, it needs to be corrected. Having rule enforcement in our society ought to help shape the model for these probability calculating engines, toward the betterment of society.
    The other aspect of this, is if the brain itself was deficient or broken in some way to allow it to choose B instead of A, No matter what the input data set is (training, or rules, regulation, or experience) then you can say this person is not responsible for their crime (choosing B) and should be treated differently (send to a mental institute, instead of jail).
    I wish the atheist community stop using the “free will” terminology because it is awash with imprecision and theological baggage that misses representing reality. Whenever we try to explain it, we always get wrapped around the axel. The model above is derived directly from Neural Science and AI research.
    Thank you for all your great work.

    • @saifsaif8352
      @saifsaif8352 Před 5 lety +13

      dude this comment was epic

    • @VASTSports
      @VASTSports Před 5 lety +2

      ......amazing

    • @slypkc1218
      @slypkc1218 Před 4 lety +9

      Solid mate but dont ever get it confused no matter what you are never truly responsible for your action, only held accountable.

    • @25hvghfgetr6
      @25hvghfgetr6 Před 4 lety +3

      I don't disagree with your comment, but you are ironically part of the problem why concept of free will (its nonexistence) is harder to grasp than it needs to be. You make it way too complicated. The fundamental mistake I think is to argue (firstly) from the point of brain science to debunk free will, when we have the logical killshot under our noses.
      Choice is either:
      1. predetermined
      2. random
      You could even have full reign over the universe and laws that govern it, but you wouldn't be able to make it as such, where you would escape choice being random or predetermined.

    • @slypkc1218
      @slypkc1218 Před 4 lety +1

      @@25hvghfgetr6 which is exactly why we are also in a simulation, acting out our roles. No universe can escape predictability, so reality means absolutely nothing anywhere.

  • @wezzuh2482
    @wezzuh2482 Před 4 lety +254

    "You can't control the strengths or objects of your desire"
    Buddhists: ARE YOU SURE ABOUT THAT?!

    • @wezzuh2482
      @wezzuh2482 Před 4 lety +6

      @Everstruggling If we give buddhists the merit of the doubt, they claim to be able to completely eradicate any form of desiring from the mind.

    • @eddewhurst7662
      @eddewhurst7662 Před 4 lety +47

      @@wezzuh2482 Why would they do that? Because they want to.

    • @greasergirl6987
      @greasergirl6987 Před 4 lety +13

      Everstruggling You are right that Buddhists don’t believe a human can fully rid themselves of any desire. They do however believe you can curb and temper those desires (The Middle Way). Therefore, a Buddhist would agree that our desires/wants have strong influence over our minds and our decisions and that there is no way to totally eradicate them. However, they would disagree (with the guy in this video) that it is impossible to want something and then decide not to want it. The more you practice not wanting something the more you don’t want it, and therefore, you choose what you want. It’s a long process that takes a crazy amount of willpower and focus, but it can be done. Once you curb one desire, another may pop up as you go through life and circumstances change, and you’ll have to start the process all over again. There’s really no difference from this belief and behavioral psychology. If you believe you can retrain your brain and change habits, then you should believe that we have control over our wants. They go hand in hand. But I can understand peoples’ confusion because westernized culture teaches us to do the opposite and blindly satisfy our desires from the time we’re born.
      One could argue, following this video's logic, that the desire to curb your desire is in itself a want, and therefore, that desire must have been stronger (due to pre-determined circumstances) than the desire not to change one's behavior. But anyone that has suffered from any kind of addiction can tell you that they can be so chemically dependent on their object of desire that they seem to crave it with every fiber of their being. And yet, one will at some point face that inevitable and pivotal choice: whether to give in to their desire for temporary pleasure or fight back against it in order to reclaim their freedom. To me, this is evidence of another aspect of our brain that moves past our simple wants/desires. It's some kind of willpower/force science and classic logic fails to explain. Some may call this one's spirit or soul. And this goes back to the age old debate over whether man's mind is distinct from one's soul and vice versa. So, I guess you could say this video is only true if you don't believe in the existence of the soul. And neuroscience just hasn't gone far enough yet to be able to rule it out. And therefore, how can we say every choice is a product of our desire if we are yet to fully understand where that desire stems from?
      As of yet, I'm not convinced one way or another that free will exists or doesn't exist. But if it doesn't exist, I don't think it's because of the reasons in this video. If anything, I find it more likely that our lives are already laid out before us due to forces beyond our comprehension. Whether that means we're just pawns in a simulation and our choices are a complete illusion; or our understanding of time is skewed and everything that will happen has already happened and will always be; or both; or something else entirely. Either way, humans always gravitate toward black and white answers. But the truth is rarely simple. My personal belief is that it's a little of both (a combination of fate/free will): that we are destined for some experiences and have choices over others. And this goes back to the Buddhist idea of the soul and reincarnation and the choice to either take the opportunity to temper our desires and free our spirit or let it pass us by and be born again...

    • @Alphalete7
      @Alphalete7 Před 4 lety +5

      @@greasergirl6987 People will gravitate towards black & white because it's comforting to feel they've resolved one of life's many questions.

    • @greasergirl6987
      @greasergirl6987 Před 4 lety +10

      Everstruggling You don’t need to want to become a monk to want to be a better person. I’m sorry if that is a difficult concept for you to grasp. And i find it funny you think I helped prove your point, because I feel like you helped prove mine with your question. I’ve never met one person that doesn’t want to be successful or grow as a person in some way, unless they have some kind of psychosis. The main thing that differentiates people who want to get better with those who choose complacency, is that the former takes responsibility for their actions. Really think about why the idea of there being no free will comforts you so much. It’s appealing for a reason. Also, people these days are always angry if you use “too many words.” God forbid they put effort and brainpower into understanding anything more complex than what can be depicted in a meme. And psychology is a lot more complicated than a simple saying. I’ve read countless books and taken courses and gone to psychologists myself, so I know plenty. Anyway, knowledge and what’s written in the textbooks isn’t everything. People can memorize every fact in the world and still know nothing. Just like everything else, the field of psychology relies a lot on one’s intuition since there is actually very little proven about the human brain. Until we understand more, I don’t see it as appropriate for some CZcamsr (credentials unknown) to make blanket claims - in the name of “philosophizing” about free will and our desires - with no real evidence to support it. We don’t yet understand where our wants stem from, and therefore, I don’t see how anyone could make a statement like that with absolute certainty.

  • @phenomenal_f.m8041
    @phenomenal_f.m8041 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Man can do what he wills,but he can't will what he wills-arthur schopenheur

  • @gemgarrett01
    @gemgarrett01 Před 4 měsíci

    for some reason, when i was just a kid, i realised i didn't believe in free will, and it's never brought me unease. it's always brought relief and ease. freedom from regret largely, i suppose. i guess my experience has been one of wanting less responsibility rather than more control. i still take responsibility for my choices, though, and try to improve when i make mistakes. i guess because i still want to have positive impacts with my actions, and i can't control that want. i just have the freedom from a lot of the guilt and regret and rumination that I'm prone to when making mistakes.

  • @benhobbs8705
    @benhobbs8705 Před 3 lety +162

    When I hear you say something along the lines of "you are completely controlled by your wants", it doesn't make sense to me. It seems to imply that "I" am somehow a separate entity from my desires, when in fact my desires are actually a large part of what I would define as "myself". What is a person if not a set of changing desires motivated by memories? I don't feel like a slave to my desires because I literally am my desires.

    • @elimgarak1617
      @elimgarak1617 Před 3 lety +33

      Yes, agreed, scrolled down to say this. If we confine the definition of self and the definition of free will to just the conscious component, as was discussed in the video, then the video is logically correct. However, that definition is a bit narrow. It may make more sense to redefine the argument presented above as "you don't have fully conscious free will." Part of us - our desires - are subconscious and driven by various environmental, historical, and genetic factors. That does not mean that those factors exclusively define what we are - and vice-versa, we cannot separate our conscious decisions from those factors. We are the sum of our consciousness and the above-mentioned factors.
      To put it another way, CS could have two competing desires - the desire for chocolate or vanilla. Which one he selects is up to his conscious mind, based on various factors, including other desires, memory, knowledge, etc. If he went back in time and told himself that chocolate ice cream is bad, he could and likely would select vanilla, based on the updated knowledge.

    • @scambammer5940
      @scambammer5940 Před 3 lety +9

      @@elimgarak1617 I do stuff all of the time without even thinking about it at a conscious level. I'm pretty sure everyone does.

    • @therenegades7329
      @therenegades7329 Před 3 lety

      Exactly

    • @therenegades7329
      @therenegades7329 Před 3 lety

      Without desires we will be same as a dead thing than alive

    • @therenegades7329
      @therenegades7329 Před 3 lety

      We will be fucking stones without it

  • @major7thsmcgee973
    @major7thsmcgee973 Před 5 lety +169

    Drinking game: Take a shot every time he says 'want'.

  • @DanieleDeVecchi.
    @DanieleDeVecchi. Před 7 měsíci +2

    I don't want to get up at 6 a.m. on Sunday, I'm not forced to do it because of work or school, but in the scenario when I actually do it, that would be free will. I would be doing an action without wanting it and without being forced.

    • @bob38028
      @bob38028 Před 4 měsíci

      Do you want to get paid?

  • @write2jas80
    @write2jas80 Před 11 měsíci

    Very good information 👏

  • @hsbswjwsb
    @hsbswjwsb Před 4 lety +100

    Actually when your “forced to do something” you aren’t. Even if severe punishment will follow not doing something you still “want” to not deal with punishment rather than doing the task. Only exception being prison where no matter what u will be physically forced in there

    • @soybean3423
      @soybean3423 Před 4 lety +14

      Agree. Other exceptions: blinking, breathing, and anything that you do automatically and unconsciously. You are "forced" to do this by your brain, then...

    • @andrewhertig4260
      @andrewhertig4260 Před 4 lety

      Was about to comment this. Very true. Now there truly is only 1 reason you ever do anything.

    • @SpikeShroom
      @SpikeShroom Před 4 lety

      @@soybean3423 I would contest those. You blink because your eyes get dry, and you implicitly "want" to make it stop. It may be automatic, but there is still a choice to continue.

    • @mwbrazier
      @mwbrazier Před 4 lety

      I was looking for an example of being forced to do something. It seems to me that all of those would still come down to a want. I'm not sure that even your example of being forced in prison works. You could fight the correctional officers & they might have to kill you. If they succeeded in transporting you to prison without killing you, I'm still not sure that it works. Once in prison, you could refuse to do whatever they told you, no matter what the consequences were. You still wouldn't be forced to do anything, at least not that I can think of. Being forced into a location seems different than doing something.

    • @bobbykay485
      @bobbykay485 Před 4 lety +8

      @@SpikeShroom @soybean blinking, breathing, those are involuntary actions. If you want to argue that you could not blink until you go blind, or hold your breath til death, consider your heartbeat, you cant choose for it to stop right now. These are involuntary processes. Alex carefully chose his free will definition because we do have voluntary choices, it's just that once they're made, they never would have been different.

  • @samsstudio6283
    @samsstudio6283 Před 4 lety +178

    I think the best statement would be " we Dont control what we want, "

    • @optionsstrategies7511
      @optionsstrategies7511 Před 4 lety +2

      Sam's Studio But there are ways to control what we want(think we want).

    • @samsstudio6283
      @samsstudio6283 Před 4 lety +2

      @@optionsstrategies7511 yes... Think we want? When we think we want something we actually want that thing..but.we cant control what we want...we cant control our choice of want.

    • @optionsstrategies7511
      @optionsstrategies7511 Před 4 lety

      Sam's Studio Certainly there are things in your life that you have wanted and no longer want. Or there are things you thought you wanted, but then decided you did not want. What is the force controlling this desire and these changes?

    • @samsstudio6283
      @samsstudio6283 Před 4 lety +3

      @@optionsstrategies7511 my thinking,my circumstances, my upbringing,and my genetics.

    • @optionsstrategies7511
      @optionsstrategies7511 Před 4 lety

      Sam's Studio So all of these factors are out of your control, but they control what you want?

  • @terryhammond1253
    @terryhammond1253 Před 5 měsíci +1

    This is unquestionably the clearest example of why we don't have free will that I have ever heard.

  • @kirtkincaid5662
    @kirtkincaid5662 Před 5 měsíci +2

    This seems particularly applicable to lower life forms. But human beings seem to transcend all other life forms. Self-awareness, i believe, is a big factor. Consciousness is another key player, i think. And i honestly can't think of any scenario where you could be forced to do anything. You would always have a choice. To be forced, you would have to lose your agency completely. Which doesn't seem possible. Getting pushed off of a ledge is not a description of something you were forced to do. Rather, it is a description of something that was done to you. Or something that happened to you.

  • @RayAtchley
    @RayAtchley Před 6 lety +20

    Want doesn't even sound like a word anymore

  • @daonedaonly942
    @daonedaonly942 Před 2 lety +160

    Free will and gods punishment was something I always struggled to believe too. What convinced me was imagining that I was a scientist who had the ability to create life and who could also see into the future. I can create a being and hardwire every single desire and thought process of this being. Not only that, but based on precisely where I raised this being and the exact people this being grew up around, I would know exactly their desires, beliefs, and life path. Now, this is even less than what god can do. My thought was, how can a god, who made me with the specific desires and thought processes that I have, and put me specifically in a home and surrounded by people where he knew exactly how they would affect me (i.e. god is in control of both nature and nurture), how could a god like this fault me for any of the decisions I 'choose' to make?

    • @polandball999
      @polandball999 Před rokem +16

      My thought is this:
      if god is all knowing, he knows what i'm going to do before i do it

    • @Bunni504
      @Bunni504 Před rokem

      Well Christians will say God only created the first two humans. Other humans came through reproduction. Still God should not held us responsible. He knew it will happen and should have stop it. Then again if someone thought a wrong thought, that doesn’t excuse them to commit it.

    • @Bunni504
      @Bunni504 Před rokem +6

      @@polandball999
      Right. That doesn’t mean he cause it, but allowing it is just as bad. Before you say God created us. He didn’t. Only the first two people who were said to be prefect until they are the fruit. Besides having a bad thought doesn’t mean you should act on it. Unless you was raise wrongly, you could have rebuke those thoughts.

    • @derek9628
      @derek9628 Před rokem +12

      @@Bunni504 but god made me uncapable of not getting the proof, he changes environmental facts, and hardwire my thought process, he knew i would do that, i can choose to not do it, but that is just an illusion since god created me knowing i wouldnt get the apple

    • @hyemster2274
      @hyemster2274 Před rokem +21

      this reminds me of what I used to think in the childhood. when ever an ant was passing, I'd think that if I kill the ant right now, that's the death the god has decided for the ant and if I don't do that but kill it after five minutes then that's also decided and if I don't do anything of them and just let it go then that is also decided by the god. I used to be very confused because of that.

  • @paulwatts9015
    @paulwatts9015 Před rokem +1

    It's basically Newton's first Law of motion.
    I act because something out of my control pressed upon me. Or more importantly I don't act because the outside force is not sufficient to move me.
    The only free will that exist is 'Free Willy'

    • @hambone4728
      @hambone4728 Před 11 měsíci

      I believe there is a gaping hole in the argument. If we will only ever do what we want to do the most (or are forced to do) then who decides what I wanted to do the most?
      Who felt that I wanted vanilla ice cream more than chocolate?
      There must be someone or something inside of me who is feeling these wants and judging which want is the strongest. Right?

  • @DH-rs6cq
    @DH-rs6cq Před 9 měsíci +5

    Feels like a lot of overthinking. Unless some other mind posesses your mind and forces an action you have freedom of consideration and action for whatever. I don't think after that there is anything to consider.

    • @DH-rs6cq
      @DH-rs6cq Před 3 měsíci

      @CraigScottFrost then yhered be no point to life but to dance for a sick fuck. For me, I am no typical theist but I will say all that truly matters is we improve ourselves from whatever broke us and we approach life with Paul's list of fruits of the spirit. No matter your faith or position. If we all do that and God hates it then he's no God of love and unworthy of us.
      The Bible is just as ugly as it is beautiful bc it is a mirror of us. Because we wrote it.

    • @6393dude
      @6393dude Před měsícem

      A higher power acting as a puppet master is not necessary for determinism. Ever since the big bang, particles that make up the universe have been reacting to the past actions of other particles. Our bodies and brains are still just a collection of particles reacting to the past actions of other particles. No action can be separated from an outside influence, therefore no free will cannot exist.

  • @amydebuitleir
    @amydebuitleir Před rokem +48

    When I was a little kid, I didn't have the illusion of free will. It seemed kind of unfair that my parents would punish me for something, when I didn't feel I had any control over whether I did it or not. It was when I was about 6 or 7 that I started to think I had control over my choices.

    • @antoniofarina716
      @antoniofarina716 Před rokem +1

      Well after all there's a distinction between 'free will' and 'free action'

    • @kennypowers1945
      @kennypowers1945 Před rokem +4

      Free will isn’t an illusion lol. You always have a choice to do things you don’t want to do

    • @antoniofarina716
      @antoniofarina716 Před rokem +9

      @@kennypowers1945 that's free action, not free will

    • @paulwatts9015
      @paulwatts9015 Před rokem +2

      It would seem that punishments/consequences for your childhood actions were designed to create a want strong enough to act against your current wants. Building up your Id, ego and superego in the design of your parents.

    • @user-td3ut4tg3v
      @user-td3ut4tg3v Před 9 měsíci +2

      Why would you know it’s unfair if you don’t have free will😂

  • @2STROKESTUFFING
    @2STROKESTUFFING Před 4 lety +28

    I sat there staring at the bonfire trying to imagine how differently it would've behaved if I had lit it from the opposite side.

    • @tomwatson9032
      @tomwatson9032 Před 4 lety

      @Gods Servant That means nothing. The initial choice was not dependent on the outcome. Temporally, it couldn't be.

    • @peagreen8588
      @peagreen8588 Před 4 lety

      Is this a line of your own creation? I find it profoundly beautiful

  • @2risingfall38
    @2risingfall38 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I wanted to know what you had to say about free will, so I exercised my free will to continue to watch your video.

  • @samppakoivula9977
    @samppakoivula9977 Před 12 dny +1

    The fundamental flaw of this video is that is mixes up want with choice. Wanting or not wanting isn't the relevant factor here, but choice. You can want even multiple things at the same time, but choose only one of them at a time. Choice, on the other hand is included in the most intuitive definition of free will and if anyone defines free will otherwise or has some hidden presumptions behind that definition, the those definitions are more or less bollocks and even with prestige philosophers agreeing with those other definitions do not by default make them any less bollocks

    • @lisalawwill4843
      @lisalawwill4843 Před 8 dny

      That's why I use the word impulse instead of want. For me, the word 'want' implies that it's personal and there's nothing personal about this. An impulse arises to do/choose one thing over another. That impulse wins out every time. Even if you think you're over riding it and do the opposite, that means the impulse to do the opposite was greater. Even if you want multiple things at the same time an impulse to choose one (or an impulse to try to do more than one) will eventually arise.

    • @samppakoivula9977
      @samppakoivula9977 Před 6 dny

      @@lisalawwill4843 Impulses may control us, yes, but often we must also control our impulses. We are not puppets, we have responsibility of our actions.

  • @LibertarianRealist
    @LibertarianRealist Před 6 lety +47

    Free will doesn't imply the supernatural ability to transcend your identity and instantiate a different set of desires than the ones you come hard wired with. Free will implies the mental capacity to exercise conscious choice within an available context. It is a psychological phenomenon, not a metaphysical power. By consciously choosing to reject free will, you are inescapably exercising it (in the psychological sense - the only sense in which free will can meaningfully apply).

    • @andywilson5677
      @andywilson5677 Před 6 lety +25

      Is exercising a conscious choice meaningful if you don't control the reasons behind that choice? I would argue that even if you think it is, the choice we make is still deterministic in nature. If we were to make an exact copy of you, with the exact same brain state and put you both into an identical room then all of your choices would be the exact same. You would both say the exact same things at the same time etc.

    • @Kevorama0205
      @Kevorama0205 Před 6 lety +6

      Libertarian Realist Right, that's a different definition, one that basically boils down to "we have free will because we feel like we have free will" which Alex mentioned.
      Can an entity have no consciousness but still have free will? Can an entity have no free will but still be conscious? How would that work? If not, what's the difference between free will and consciousness? If there's no difference, free will is a redundant term.

    • @blackneos940
      @blackneos940 Před 6 lety

      michaelmath Puffy would agree with you..... :3 This whole "free will vs. determinism" thing is ridiculous by default..... :3 Can't Fight The Systemagic..... :3

    • @LukeSumIpsePatremTe
      @LukeSumIpsePatremTe Před 6 lety +1

      Rational people do NOT choose what they believe.

    • @LibertarianRealist
      @LibertarianRealist Před 6 lety +3

      By invoking the concept "you," you are presupposing the existence of a being with a particular identity. Yes, an exact copy of me would make the same choices given exactly the same circumstances. That doesn't mean the choices aren't real as mental processes. Would only the choices of a boundless, unlimited consciousness capable of transcending the law of identity count as "free"? I don't think that's the basis of the concept of free will or what proponents of it believe.

  • @WillGaylord
    @WillGaylord Před 6 lety +59

    Looks like the Calvinists were right all along.

    • @pologonzalez7935
      @pologonzalez7935 Před 6 lety +2

      Yes this cosmic person unwittingly is deterministic in the way reformed theology teaches. I wonder if he is familiar with infralapsarianism, sublapsarianism, and supralapsarianism. I don't think so however. He reads Richard Dawkins books.

    • @angelusvastator1297
      @angelusvastator1297 Před 6 lety +11

      So ironic that determinist atheists and Calvinists make a great team.

    • @travcollier
      @travcollier Před 5 lety +6

      Calvanists might be right about free will, but they are pretty wrong about everything else... especially what it implies.
      Free will (or not) isn't a problem unless you posit the existence of a being which can actually predict everything. For us mortals, free will is just a very practical illusion. There's no more use worrying/arguing about free will than there is in trying to prove the statement "This is not a sentence." is true or false.

    • @matthewlallinger9603
      @matthewlallinger9603 Před 5 lety +1

      Calvinism doesn't teach free will doesn't exist. Hypercalvinism does. Mainly, the Calvinist would say free will is overpowered for soteriological purposes.

    • @CroElectroStile
      @CroElectroStile Před 5 lety +1

      Yeshua = Truth, ofc we have free will. There are people who willingly choose evil, because they love the energy it produces

  • @fjde009
    @fjde009 Před 8 měsíci

    Wow! This blows my mind!

  • @Thechemist602
    @Thechemist602 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I thought about exercising my free will by subscribing but then I remembered I don’t want to and so I didn’t.
    Perhaps you’re right.

  • @lordflufffluff
    @lordflufffluff Před 4 lety +49

    Oh my God, I've been thinking about this for almost my entire life and he summed up how I feel in a video!

    • @keyboardevangelist8956
      @keyboardevangelist8956 Před 3 lety +1

      THIS IS THE END TIMES🔥🔥🔥.ENOUGH WITH ATHEISM FOOLISHNESS. YOU ARE ALL STUCK IN PLATO'S CAVE AND SATAN 'S MATRIX OF LIES. THE SPIRITUAL REALM IS REAL. REPENT OF YOUR SINS AND TRUST THE GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST. YOU WILL BE SAVED FROM HELL 🔥
      czcams.com/video/bVlfo0KHlVc/video.html
      czcams.com/video/myaroler0wM/video.html
      Your soul is on the line. Jesus is coming soooon. Jesus loves you❤

    • @JamesRichardWiley
      @JamesRichardWiley Před 3 lety

      Your free will and god's free will are awaiting clarification.

    • @keyboardevangelist8956
      @keyboardevangelist8956 Před 3 lety

      @@loocypher150 ooh! Burnnn. 🤣🤣🤣.

    • @keyboardevangelist8956
      @keyboardevangelist8956 Před 3 lety

      @@loocypher150🤣😅.But it's not certain yet. Heaven and Hell is like a quantum phenomenon in which 0 and 1 can coexist at the same time but your consciousness gets to decide/observe. We live in a quantum reality. Example the double slit experiment. The electrons are estimated to be moving in on the two paths simultaneously until the final observation is made. That's what heaven and Hell is like. If you are saved by Jesus, heaven is a certainty. But if you are not yet saved it's not yet certain where you are going. Until you finally take that jump. And since you are not allowed to see the end Until you reach the end. God sees your end. But it's you who is accountably walking towards that end.
      Have you watched TeNeT? "What has happened happened" but until you see the end you will never know. But For us who are saved we certainly know.
      The offer of forgiveness from God is offered to you NOW.
      2 Corinthians 6:2
      ..Today is the day of salvation
      Albert Einstein proved that time is a relative illusion in his theory of general relativity. The only time that truly exists is the NOW.
      You can use it with your God given free will to reject or accept God's forgiveness. To reject or accept God's love. Heaven or Hell. The choice is ultimately your's..

    • @dreismith2334
      @dreismith2334 Před 3 lety +2

      @@keyboardevangelist8956 you can’t just put quantum in front of a word to sound smart when it doesn’t make any sense

  • @heret1c385
    @heret1c385 Před 6 lety +155

    mhhhhm... icecream

    • @777Krisztian
      @777Krisztian Před 6 lety +3

      You want that ice cream hah? But does that ice cream want you too?

    • @heret1c385
      @heret1c385 Před 6 lety +4

      nobody wants me ;__;

  • @angelrose9117
    @angelrose9117 Před 5 měsíci +4

    Love this. Not only am I the only person I've ever known that doesn't believe free will exists, I did not expect this to come up on your channel after really enjoying your other videos on a different subject after recently finding your channel. Hardly anyone wants to acknowledge this as even a possibility. Thank you for sharing. I just want to add that from what I know, Einstein himself did not believe in free will, and that scientific studies have shown that the brain makes decisions before we've even had the chance to consciously process them.

    • @SuspiciousFrog69
      @SuspiciousFrog69 Před 5 měsíci

      He says free will doesn't exist because the desire part "controls you." But the fact that I still have two or more options to choose from means I have the free will to choose any of the ladder. Whether I want to work out or take a rest that day, the both options are still there. You could argue because I'm sore, my own body is the controlling mechanism but I still have the option to do either whether I'm sore or not. Sometimes working out sore has net positive outcomes when it comes to learning.

    • @kloklowewe4874
      @kloklowewe4874 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@SuspiciousFrog69thats some false logic id say. The fact that there are options does in no way mean that you are free to chose any of them. It is the choice itself that you cant control, since you dont control what you want.

    • @SuspiciousFrog69
      @SuspiciousFrog69 Před 5 měsíci

      @@kloklowewe4874 you do control what you want. You are choosing wether to continue this conversation or not, are you not?

    • @kloklowewe4874
      @kloklowewe4874 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@SuspiciousFrog69 I am choosing wether to continue the conversation, that is correct, but that doesn't necessarily mean that I can control what I choose.

    • @SuspiciousFrog69
      @SuspiciousFrog69 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@kloklowewe4874 so not having control of oneself is the mechanism that disproves free will?
      Control- the power to influence or direct people's behavior or the course of events.
      By that, the attempt to influence your stance of the existence of free will proves free will, no?

  • @time8871
    @time8871 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Sometimes there are a myriad of things I want equally and I then have to make a decision on what to do. I agree with a lot of what you are saying and I think we have less free will than how it seems and what many imagine. So, we both do and do not have free will. "The truth appeareth paradox." - Lao Tzu

    • @todradmaker4297
      @todradmaker4297 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Personally, I think we only have free will if we choose to.

  • @JavierTorres-eq5to
    @JavierTorres-eq5to Před 6 lety +34

    Good luck on your exams! Amazing video like always!

  • @jezterscap6109
    @jezterscap6109 Před 5 lety +15

    the real question is "who is this you?" that has free will. "Or what is this you?"

    • @johnatlas12
      @johnatlas12 Před 4 lety +4

      exactly, the ego is the real illusion here

  • @ItsMeJuvyYT
    @ItsMeJuvyYT Před 8 měsíci +2

    You have free will to pick between all the things you want equally.

  • @stephennelson6468
    @stephennelson6468 Před 6 měsíci

    It seems to me that I want many things, material and immaterial. My freedom of choice comes into play when I am deciding what to pursue in regard to all the wants in my life, as well as how to pursue those wants. All of those choices are filtered through at least three categories like personality, my environment, and my genetics. The fact that I have limited choices, as in I can only want what I want doesn't take away the option I have to pursue them. If one want has a stronger appeal to me for whatever reason, I still must make a series of decisions to make those wants materialize and forgo other wants in the process. My free will is my ability to exercise my options in a way that suits my values that have been developed over time. I think differently now than I did when I was 18 and I make certain choices now, I hope, to get me closer to my goals. Your definition could be adjusted to the idea that a person has agency in the world, and the exercising of that agency is free will. At least that is closer to how I see it.