The Mystery of Free Will: Donald Hoffman

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • For more information visit www.scienceandnonduality.com
    Donald Hoffman reminds us that we can predict people's choices up to seven seconds before they are conscious of making that choice. He explains the theories of free will, and presents a hypothesis of distributed free will which has consciousness as its basis, and includes a mathematical model in which free will arises within a hierarchical social network.
    For more information visit www.cogsci.uci.edu/~ddhoff/
    Science and Nonduality is a nonprofit organization, and we would love to have you as part of our community! Your support will be FULLY devoted to our mission: “To heal the schism between science and spirituality while forging a new understanding of what it means to be human - inspired by the mystics and grounded in modern science - while celebrating the mystery of life and the love that emanates from it!”

Komentáře • 628

  • @renatoalcides5104
    @renatoalcides5104 Před 3 lety +34

    at 10:48 "I am probably wrong but at least I am precise... we can play with this and see where it leads us" , this is the mark that distinguishes an honest and sharp thinker such as Donald Hoffman

  • @jacek_poplawski
    @jacek_poplawski Před 3 lety +9

    The more I learn about DH the more I enjoy this view

  • @somewherenorthofstarbase7056

    "Assuming causality and chance is just as much a miracle as assuming free will." Donald Hoffman. 🔥

  • @DarioHaruni
    @DarioHaruni Před 2 lety +19

    My God, as a Muslim I always thought about the paradox between predestination and free will, and I developed in my mind this model that is away from theological dogma, and it fits exactly with what Hoffman is explaining. I'm so happy I have a fulfilling answer to that question.

    • @fenthedog
      @fenthedog Před rokem

      so you are no longer a muslim then?

    • @DarioHaruni
      @DarioHaruni Před rokem +1

      @@fenthedog No I am exactly a Muslim.

    • @robertjsmith
      @robertjsmith Před rokem +1

      @@DarioHaruni how are you judged if you have no free will ?

    • @playerone3018
      @playerone3018 Před 4 měsíci

      It might be in this case that truth is transmitted not through belief but through self-enquiry? One may be able to drop all the other stuff sold/given/conditioned that one has acquired for this new teacher (truth). In this case, all dogma (religious or otherwise) would have to be emptied to taste the tea of this new teacher. This may be where one learns about attachment.

  • @carmellacandy509
    @carmellacandy509 Před 4 lety +40

    I just read an article written by a brain surgeon who states that free will does not come from the brain. In a nutshell, during his countless surgeries he could often make people do things when touching certain areas of the brain. However, his patients always knew when it was he and not the patient themself causing the reaction.

    • @DJ-GASM
      @DJ-GASM Před 2 lety +1

      Cite source?

    • @marcosbatista1029
      @marcosbatista1029 Před 2 lety +3

      @@DJ-GASM DR sam parnia

    • @jimmuncy5636
      @jimmuncy5636 Před 2 lety +1

      We are not morally responsible for our actions, but we are legally responsible, if we want to live in a decent society, because to live together, we need laws and to have those laws enforced.
      He's wrong in his ultimate conclusions. Cf. Quora on free will for better answers.

    • @purpose6113
      @purpose6113 Před rokem

      Damn, that's wild...

    • @MichaelDamianPHD
      @MichaelDamianPHD Před rokem +5

      @@jimmuncy5636 Yes we are morally responsible for our actions.

  • @mrnoone3922
    @mrnoone3922 Před 3 lety +37

    The observer is the observed. The thinker is the thought. J Krishnamurti. 🙏😊

  • @moonwolf790
    @moonwolf790 Před 3 lety +4

    Science has its place but l find wisdom more important than knowledge to live in this world.

  • @christopherchilton-smith6482

    Can't wait to hear Sam Harris interview this guy, these are the types of conversations i live for.

    • @travislawrencemusic
      @travislawrencemusic Před 4 lety +2

      Me too!

    • @travislawrencemusic
      @travislawrencemusic Před 4 lety +9

      Just got Hoffman's book in the mail today. Can't wait to see if I can find the holes in his theorem or if he can convince me beyond my favorable opinion of his videos so far. I'm not happy that Deepak Chopra offers the 1st praise on the back cover though...😞

    • @christopherchilton-smith6482
      @christopherchilton-smith6482 Před 4 lety +12

      @@travislawrencemusic Gotta judge ideas based on their own merits and not who supports them but yeah, i feel you there.

    • @travislawrencemusic
      @travislawrencemusic Před 4 lety

      @@christopherchilton-smith6482 agreed!

    • @raz0rcarich99
      @raz0rcarich99 Před 4 lety +21

      @@travislawrencemusic All this hate against Deepak Chopra is really born out of physicalist dogma, so I don't really see the problem there.

  • @feelingbetternaturally1099

    When we use our free will to free our minds, we will be free.

  • @alexgoslar4057
    @alexgoslar4057 Před 4 lety +11

    Thank you Donald for opening up thinking that is helpful in understanding our perseption.

  • @santanukumaracharya3467
    @santanukumaracharya3467 Před 4 lety +2

    If the key word is Mystery then I may claim to have taken in the purport of this wonderful talk as helpful to me in interpreting my experiences of a vey long life that I have already lived. Thank you.

  • @carlhammill5774
    @carlhammill5774 Před 4 lety +19

    This falls in line with what many NDEs have been saying for while - that we recreate our own reality every second.

    • @Ahldor
      @Ahldor Před 2 lety

      @jonesman What is energy?

  • @salmanel-farsi3744
    @salmanel-farsi3744 Před 3 lety +5

    One of the most humble and aritculate scientists with a theory that has many implications and practical applications in our daily lives. His model I believe can explain or is at least consistent with Buddha's aim of breaking away from karmic cycles to how our thoughts shape out destinies. I use the plural form because the model to a certain degree implies a non-physical world of concious agents and who it so say that the agents cannot live on after the physical body ceases to function.

  • @alastairpaisley6668
    @alastairpaisley6668 Před 4 lety +13

    If you're dealing with probabilities (which Hoffman's framework is) , then you're dealing with chance. No amount of sophistry will change that.

  • @phildorge2052
    @phildorge2052 Před 3 lety +6

    Ya as soon as things start to contradict each other, you're close to the truth. When you find yourself in a paradox, you have found it!

  • @claudelebel49
    @claudelebel49 Před 4 lety +17

    To truly have free will you would have to exist as a separate entity and you don't. We are riding on an ocean of Being out of which everything arises and to which everything is connected.

  • @xander1756
    @xander1756 Před 4 lety +4

    The fact there's brain activity 7 seconds before conscious awareness of making a decision doesn't have to mean there is no free will.
    It can also mean a person lacks enough self awareness to consciously observe the thinking processes occuring at that time that is the beginning of decision making.

    • @888sk8er888
      @888sk8er888 Před 4 lety

      If I cant choose which thought that will pop up in consciousness, how can I believe that I choose anything

    • @xander1756
      @xander1756 Před 4 lety +1

      @@888sk8er888 "If I can't choose which thought that will pop up in consciousness"
      If that were the case, you still have free will to choose to act on that thought or not; thus 'free will' still exists, regardless of how deep a person can or can't see into their subconscious where thought processing is theorized to occur.
      "how can I believe that I chose anything."
      Believing is easy to do.
      Take any phenomena and assign a truth label to the conclusions of the phenomena you align yourself with.
      For the act of believing is to assign the value of 'truth' to a matter without having any verifiable proof it is true.
      I.E., belief is accepting something is true without verifiable evidence.
      The current knowledge is no one can see how a thought is constructed within the human being. They have a machine that shows there's brain activity 7 seconds before conscious awareness of a thought, but they have no understanding of what that activity is or what is being constructed.
      Folks generally reside in two camps: Free will exists or it doesn't. And they can only believe at the moment because mankind hasn't yet devised a means to see thoughts being constructed, though I think everyone agrees the individual is the one creating those thoughts. (putting aside Nondualists who don't even believe an individual exists, and some other religious\spiritual folks like that)
      I have no idea why folks choose to believe or not in free will.
      What I found is imporant to me is the ability to control myself, to develop self mastery.
      I have no need to see my thoughts being initially created, for I regard free will as the ability to choose what I'll do with the thoughts I have.
      I regard free will as...
      "The last of the human freedoms - to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way." - Viktor E. Frankl
      "Every human has four endowments - self awareness, conscience, independent will and creative imagination. These give us the ultimate human freedom - the power to choose, to respond, to change." - Stephen R. Covey
      "Our ultimate freedom is the right and power to decide how anybody or anything outside ourselves will affect us." - Stephen R. Covey
      If a researcher\philosopher wants to declare that's not free will, I have no need or desire to dispute what they think. My self mastery has developed to a high degree, thus I'm content with my definition of free will.
      EG: If a researcher\philosopher says there is no free will because we automatically get upset when insulted.
      I'll then share with this researcher that I'm no longer offended when insulted. I have mastered or developed my free will to include chooing to remain calm or joyful when insulted, and to have genuine compassion for the insulter instead of anger or hate\dislike.
      None of my business if a researcher\philosopher still claims there in no free will occurring in that situation.
      I used to instantly become offended when insulted. Bat as I continued my Know Thyself journey, I began to understand my self more and of human nature, of the seemingly instinctual and of course, uncontrollable responses we humans have to situations; that we instantly react to certain stimuli.
      My attitude has developed, thus I freely choose to remain calm or joyful when insulted.
      Sam Harris, the main person I know of that's convinced free will doesn't exist.
      He would find it impossible to convince me of his belief.

    • @and4all706
      @and4all706 Před 4 lety

      Xander17 You just said you have the ability to control yourself. Who thought the though that has to be controlled by you in the first place? If it was truly your thought, you would have no reason to create a thought you then have to control so you don't act on it. Who would do that to themselves? Almost every comment here eludes to the fact that we often have no idea where our own thoughts are coming from. It is almost like two entities in one body. So when you are able to control this thought after you have it, you seem to have the final authority. What if that changes and you get overruled? Ever think you are going to go straight home from work and end up stopping at the store? Who had that thought? Who popped that idea in the middle of your thought to go home? If you stopped at the store when you wanted to go home, you no longer have the final authority. Seven seconds, ten seconds, a minute..... Who cares how long it took for that thought to get there? Bottom line is you didn't want the thought or to go to the store, so why did you create that thought? I'm not trying to argue. It's just really hard to explain in writing. The written word doesn't cut it.

    • @xander1756
      @xander1756 Před 4 lety +2

      @@and4all706
      Q1. My current judgement is if the thought is in my head, it is I that thought it.
      The issue about free will is the freedom to consciously think things through and consciously construct a conclusion, then a decision, then an action.
      While it's true I lack the self awarness to see many thoughts in their initial creation within me, I retain free will on what I wil do with that thought once I become aware of it.
      It is proposed that the bulk of our thinking is done in the subconscious, thus logically, we humans are unaware of what's occurring in there, but a devlopment of self awarness creates the ability to venture further into that arbitrary region, thus self control is increased.
      I don't know how many of my thoughts are created because I can't see 100% in to that regoin of my mind, but through experience I know that the power level of my free will is proprotional to the level of self awareness I have. So to me it's not about is there free will or not, but how much in control of myself am I. How much am I operating consciously as opposed to being on autopilot.
      Q2. I know a lot about my self, but I also know I don't know everything. But what I do know about the issue of free will is, it exists, and the issue is how much in control are we of ourselves. Just because I can't see the birth of a thought, is not proof free will doesn't exist, it simply means I lack the self awareness to see this birth.
      If free will is the ability to cconsciously choose one's actions, not knowing exactly how I generated a thught doesn't affect my ability to freely choose what to do with it.
      "It is almost like two entites in one body."
      It may look like that, but from my experiences over the decades as I delved in to know myself more, the parts of myself thay I lacked control over were not from not having free will, but from a lack of self knowledge.
      The simple example of asking someone why they're upset.
      An incident triggered an emotional response, with accompanying negative thoughts of the situation.
      I ask, why are you upset? Some folks may answer they don't know. They say this because as they scan themselves they cannot find any info to explain why they're upset.
      But, as I experienced over years, if you continue to look, if you willfully choose to return to a calm state and explore yourself, the potential exists that you'll eventually see why you chose to become upset, and in doing so, you've just learned more about how you function, of the inner workings usually hidden from superficial day to day levels of consciousness, and you can then consciously reprogram your responses so that type of incident will no longer upset you.
      Q3. Any overruling is self done, you just haven't seen the thinking going on in your subconscious that was occurring.
      Q4-5. The self had the thought, one just wasn't aware it occurred because it may have occurred in the subconscious, or as is often the case in busy modern lifestyles wrought with daily stresses, the thought to go to the store was inthe consciousness, but was quickly overlooked because the mind is overloaded with thoughts of all manner of issues.
      The issue is self awareness. The increase in self awareness increases the knowledge of oneself - the mechanisms that drive our behavior, be they emotions or thoughts.
      Q6. The self did. One may have consciously decided to go stright home, but subconsciously the mind is operating and considering this decision and may then send a message to the conscious part, to stop off at the store. I imagine one must know why one wants or needs to stop there.
      "If you stopped at the store when you wanted to go home, you no longer have the final authority."
      Only if you believe a thought you have is not yours.
      If you believe all your thought are your creation, then you are always the fianl authority. The problem is when we do things we don't want to. But this doesn't proof no free will. It does suggest a lack of self awareness of the underlying thinking and feeling mechanisms the produce the thought to go to the store. And if you can't see thse underlying mechanisms, you can conclude the thought wasn't produced by you.
      True it wasn't a conscious thought. It was a subconscious thought. But a subconscious thought is still one's thought.
      "Bottom line is you didn't want the thought or to go to the store, . . ."
      I think along the lines of, you weren't aware you formulated a reason to go to the store.
      And I don't understand the scenario; are you saying this person had a contradictory thought to go to the store, and once they got there they had no idea what they wanted there?
      I have never encountered this. I've always experienced it a such - that I may have decided to go straight home, but then a thought would arise to stop off at the store first, but this thought was accompanied by a reason to go there. For if there was no justifiable reason, I would ignor the thought and go straight home.
      The only thing I can think of choosing to go somewhere without understanding why suggests a really low level of self awareness.

    • @and4all706
      @and4all706 Před 4 lety

      Xander17 Thank you! That was a really nice response. I think it was in Q2 that I finally understood. When you talked about someone not knowing why they were upset and if they continued to look and be honesty, they could get to the bottom of what was making them upset and learn more about one aspect of themselves that had been unknown. I was being a little sarcastic and naive with my first comment, but I learned something. I will have to go read more about free will, but I think once we understand how much of our thinking is done by our subconscious mind, it becomes like a big puzzle. Like the Creator has a sense of humor and just made the game harder. Now how do I solve this one?..... If you had had some arrogant response like many would have given me, you would have not stimulated my thought and I might have lost my desire to ever learn about this. Thank you again.

  • @travislawrencemusic
    @travislawrencemusic Před 4 lety +11

    As a fiction writer, I've coined the phrase "polysolipsism" to describe the structure of the world of one of my stories, and I've loosely believed that it may not be a fiction in our world as well. In an infinite universe, we each could have our own private universe while simultaneously participating in everyone else's own private universes.

    • @TheSaffronasha
      @TheSaffronasha Před 4 lety +4

      Yes....Hugh Everett was veering in the right direction. Look up the Many Minds Interpretation. " The many-minds interpretation of quantum mechanics extends the many-worlds interpretation by proposing that the distinction between worlds should be made at the level of the mind of an individual observer"

    • @travislawrencemusic
      @travislawrencemusic Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheSaffronasha: I'm familiar with that interpretation but not well-versed

    • @n-xsta
      @n-xsta Před rokem +1

      Oh 🤯

    • @kdub9812
      @kdub9812 Před 10 měsíci +1

      I love that word Ima use that

  • @johnbrowne8744
    @johnbrowne8744 Před 5 lety +9

    Very good. Its straight forward. The "consciousness only" model of reality requires "freewill" to work. No freewill.....no consciousness(self awareness). Even if what we percieve is a mirage in a house of mirrors, you choose. Consciousness must choose, right or wrong, good or bad, correct or incorrect. It doesn't matter to consciousness. Choosing matters to consciousness. Not control. Choosing. That's how consciousness explores itself. That's why you're here. That's why you chose to have this brief human experience. After this? Your freewill increases infinitely. Be kind. Have fun.😊

    • @mattbabb.
      @mattbabb. Před 5 lety +1

      John Browne consciousness does not require free will. Have you ever had a song stuck in your head?

    • @johnbrowne8744
      @johnbrowne8744 Před 5 lety +3

      @@mattbabb. Not my experience. Consciousness itself requires the option to choose, right or wrong, good or bad, correct or incorrect, remember or not. Regarding automatic things, so called "unconscious" things, these too occur IN consciousness. Donald agrees and teaches this phenomena of consciousness. Memory is not consciousness. Many confuse the two. You forget most things you do but remain conscious. Like your breakfast last Tuesday, most of your dreams, and yes music popping into your head from nowhere. 😊

    • @and4all706
      @and4all706 Před 4 lety +1

      John Browne You have no idea why we are here! That conclusion you came to is from reading and spreading nonsense that you haven't vetted.

    • @fenthedog
      @fenthedog Před rokem

      Like Feynman said said, “If you think you understand quantum mechanics, you don't understand quantum mechanics.” You obviously don't understand this argument.

  • @judyhart7628
    @judyhart7628 Před 3 lety +7

    Awesome work. Absolutely credible critical thought brought forth. Thank you [all] for your research and and it's presentation here. You guys rock!

  • @Achrononmaster
    @Achrononmaster Před 3 lety +4

    (1) Hoffman is nuts on the "evolution cannot lead to truth perception" crap (his models take too many false assumptions and ignore subtleties about how we evolve), BUT (2) this is by far the best talk by a leading scientist on free will that I've seen so far. A consciousness-primacy view is in fact compatible with objective physical reality, and his vague hierarchy diagram shows this! But the degrees of consciousness it implies is not the correct interpretation. Rocks just aren't conscious --- it is a total distortion of the meaning of the word to say so, and leads to vacuous panpsychism. If everything is consciousness we have not explained one single thing about consciousness. So the way to interpret the hierarchy is as a set of levels of something (for now undefined) like "spirit". It is a "degree of" or "grades of spirit" picture. Elementary interactions in physical spacetime are like the most primitive grades of spirit, which we study through objective science, and we've been quite successful uncovering a lot of this grade of spirit, so much so we baulk at labelling it "spiritual" since it is so simplistic we prefer to think of it as banal and mindless. Well it is! And so higher degrees of spirit cannot emerge without causal efficacy at a higher level. I will not expand much on this in a CZcams Comment, but there is a way to show how causal efficacy can emerge for macroscopic objects composed of the "mindless" physical substrates, and that's via Planck scale closed time-like curves. The macroscopic future can effect the microscopic past. Note that this does not "explain" human conscious at all, all we get out of such atemporal dynamics is an escape from physical determinism into free will possibility. How exactly our free will/consciousness gains conscious control over matter is still a mystery, and probably has to involve thinking about how irreducible uncertainty propagates, which has something to do with the spacetime boundary, since it (uncertainty) as a resource for a free will cannot come from anywhere else, it has to come from outside spacetime, and can only thus be a resource of creatures within spacetime if it originates at the boundaries (at singularities and infinite horizons).

    • @flux9433
      @flux9433 Před rokem

      (1)-What if the awereness we have today wasnt the same in the future what if evolution progress might be needed to force stop in the near future because of the ways it continues!?in order to save the mind?

  • @ACIMwithJodie
    @ACIMwithJodie Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for providing science to support what I have been learning in ACIM.

  • @filmjazz
    @filmjazz Před 4 lety +24

    I say this with the utmost humility, but I came up with my own “consciousness is fundamental via conscious agents” theory independently of Hoffman close to 15-20 years ago in the wake of a large number of carefully controlled experiments with ketamine. My theory is personal and involves no mathematics so I’m nobody and have nothing important to publish, but my insights are exactly the sort that would lead someone with Hoffman’s skills and training to develop this type of theory. When I listen to his lectures my reaction is “holy sh*t someone took the same idea and formalized it.” I “get it” on a very deep level and I’m thrilled that this man exists and is doing what he’s doing. The first question I would ask him is if he was inspired by psychedelics.

    • @jonathanwoodvincent
      @jonathanwoodvincent Před 4 lety +1

      Thomas Metzinger was similarly influenced by ketamine. Perhaps you already know of his work

    • @filmjazz
      @filmjazz Před 4 lety

      jonathanwoodvincent I had not, but I will look him up!

    • @niji_no_saki
      @niji_no_saki Před 4 lety

      me too. I was astonished how this man can precisely articulate the idea formed in my head through reading about quantum physics and spiritual traditions from all around the world.
      Aside from his academic background, in another talk he said he meditates.

    • @lorraine5800
      @lorraine5800 Před 4 lety

      Same! Only I’ve never dabbled with psychedelics, I just think deeply about things a lot, which might mean nothing but then again it’s interesting to see the same ideas I “toy” with formalized like you said here.

    • @gettoefl
      @gettoefl Před 4 lety

      ask him, he is active on twitter

  • @smashhimmungo5798
    @smashhimmungo5798 Před rokem +1

    WHAT HE SAID AT 6.34 JUST BLEW MY MIND !! WOW !!!

  • @cmvamerica9011
    @cmvamerica9011 Před 3 lety +1

    I like his humbleness about his beliefs.

  • @iloverumi
    @iloverumi Před 5 lety

    excellent talk. thank you.

  • @marcobrigliadori7382
    @marcobrigliadori7382 Před 3 lety

    You really are a great lawyer !!!

  • @michaeldavis6890
    @michaeldavis6890 Před rokem +1

    Best argument that I have encountered, and i suspect I have looked at them all.

  • @mikeharper3784
    @mikeharper3784 Před rokem +2

    We have all been given the same human bodies and brains and use them in the way our consciousness wants to and chooses to, experience the adventure here in the material world in the material universe, all with a non-material consciousness. And free will is equivalent to a couple choosing the movie to watch and why we always end up watching the Hallmark Channel, because we have the free will to always let our wives and girlfriends choose the movie. That’s both free will AND the secret to a long and happy relationship. 🖖

  • @MusingsFromTheJohn00
    @MusingsFromTheJohn00 Před rokem +1

    The human brain/mind is not just a neurological system. It is a digitally discrete upper layer of neurological swarm intelligence complexly intermeshed with a digitally discrete lower layer of DNA/RNA/Protein swarm intelligence, both layers of which use analog systems but the digitally discrete aspect of being able to make and remember clear distinctive choice is critically important for the functioning of the intelligent system.
    Within the incredibly complex swarm intelligence of the brain/mind there are vast numbers of subswarm intelligent systems which form together to create the whole swarm intelligence. These subswarm systems form layers like an onion, separate but adjoining regions like soap bubbles, and overlapping regions like overlapping spheres... and all these types of subswarm groupings are happening at the same time, which is one of the things making it even more difficult for us to fully reverse engineer.
    The self aware consciousness, which I will refer to from this point as the pilot, is a subswarm intelligent system within the whole swarm mind. Within that subswarm system specifically creating and supporting the pilot, there is the conscious pilot which is what we think of ourselves and the subconscious to us parts of that specific subswarm intelligence which is our pilot. Even though we, the self aware conscious part of our pilot, are not aware of that subconscious part of our pilot, that is still us.
    YOU CANNOT SEPARATE US FROM US!!! Doing so is just stupid.
    Any decision making by the pilot is by the pilot, and just because part of how the pilot works is unconscious to the pilot, it is still the pilot.
    Even other parts of our whole swarm mind which are not directly part of the pilot are still part of our whole swarm mind and thus part of us. This can get into a different possible example where subconscious to the pilot subswarm intelligent systems that are not directly part of the pilot can exert influence over the decision making of the pilot. But, that is how it is supposed to work. Various internal influences within the whole swarm mind are brought into the pilot subswarm to get a piloting singular decision on what the whole swarm mind is going to do.
    While the pilot is a subswarm intelligent system fed a virtual reality to observe to act as a central decider whose decisions are then given to other subswarm intelligent systems to carry out, and that is our self conscious part of our minds, the pilot we normally think of as ourselves is NOT OUR WHOLE SELVES.
    Our whole selves is our whole swarm intelligence which is our whole body, including all our cells, though higher swarm intelligence is concentrated around neurological cells and astrocyte cells in the brain.

  • @travislawrencemusic
    @travislawrencemusic Před 4 lety +2

    I wonder what he would think of Ken Wilber's idea of "holons" in his book "A Theory of Everything"?

  • @engelbertus1406
    @engelbertus1406 Před rokem

    in defining “what is free” I like to state only anything that doesn’t refer to anything else to be true can be true and therefore free. Consciousness only refers to itself to exist, and hence, consciousness can only be observed with consciousness. This statement of course makes it hard to study consciousness or any decision making entity in a scientific way, for tho we see a choice being made, that choice is only present in relation to itself.

  • @pxlmnk3179
    @pxlmnk3179 Před 5 lety +2

    Great work Hoffman.

  • @erikjensen4183
    @erikjensen4183 Před 4 lety

    read this mans book! highly recommend

  • @matthewmurdoch6932
    @matthewmurdoch6932 Před 4 lety +12

    Let me throw this out as an agreeable starting point...
    Experience should be our starting point.
    Questions are not valid conclusions.
    Let us agree on these two points and then move forward in our investigations of reality, no?

    • @miguelthealpaca8971
      @miguelthealpaca8971 Před 4 lety +1

      Sometimes we need to conclude that there is a still a question. When people say that consciousness and free will are explained by neurons etc. we need to point out that their explanations don't cover everything (or even make sense, perhaps) and that there's still a question of how it works.

    • @movme
      @movme Před 4 lety +1

      All that one can do is experience. Experience experience.
      To experience can be to question.
      And, as I have been saying for many years:....
      + "Every answer generates new questions."
      + "Question everything, including the questions."
      That leaves us with an endless supply of questions.
      No question is a conclusion, but rather an opening/beginning because....
      + Any question will always generate new questions.
      + A conclusion is a dead end unless it is questioned.

  • @roybecker492
    @roybecker492 Před 4 lety

    Great video!

  • @timothylanders3189
    @timothylanders3189 Před rokem

    Ok, I love listening to Hoffman's clips. One thing I'd like explained by the smart. How can one tell their body part to heal & it obeys them? Tell a disease to go & it obeys them? When a learned individual can explain this phenomenon. Then, I'll take heed of that one that can offer up an answer. Was that crickets I hear in the background?....

  • @marcosgalvao3182
    @marcosgalvao3182 Před 3 lety +41

    Its not a mystery , consciousness is the ultimate reality .

    • @daithiocinnsealach3173
      @daithiocinnsealach3173 Před 3 lety +3

      It's your ultimate reality. It's all you know. You don't know what happens when you die and from for all you know your consciousness is an emergent property of your brain which ceases at death.

    • @OneEmanation
      @OneEmanation Před 3 lety +7

      Far too cocky of an assertion to take seriously.

    • @JesusChrist2000BC
      @JesusChrist2000BC Před 3 lety +3

      @@daithiocinnsealach3173 3rd party confirmed Reincarnation studies prove this is nonsense. Plenty of people's consciousness come back to this world. However you slice it it's a FACT and this happens. Mostly likely through Quantam Physics.

    • @KingNast
      @KingNast Před 2 lety +2

      @@JesusChrist2000BC wtf are you even talking about.

    • @robertjsmith
      @robertjsmith Před rokem +1

      you say consciousness i say awareness,somebody else says,experience, pantheists say God is everything

  • @binali2775
    @binali2775 Před 3 lety +11

    In the beginning I thought a human being has full free will. With my personal growth and time, it sounded untrue and felt silly and wrong so I thought we have mostly free will. But with time the amount of free will that I know or think we have shrinks and lately I’m starting to think that we have very little insignificant amount of free will or not at all.

    • @suzanneyoung1729
      @suzanneyoung1729 Před 2 lety

      Hmmm...that needs long thought....

    • @kephalopod3054
      @kephalopod3054 Před 2 lety +2

      Years of observation of people's behaviour leads me to believe that there is not much free will, if any.

    • @diff326
      @diff326 Před 2 lety +1

      Every one has as much free will as he has ethics norms. In case some one has no clue about ethics he is following his instincts as an animal does

  • @RIMJANESSOHMALOOG
    @RIMJANESSOHMALOOG Před 4 lety +44

    that guy is making some very interesting research, he's bridging science and spirituality.

    • @rmcd823
      @rmcd823 Před 2 lety

      I don't see how it's possible any link spirituality with classical physics. Eventually, Quantum Physics could do it.

    • @RIMJANESSOHMALOOG
      @RIMJANESSOHMALOOG Před 2 lety

      @@rmcd823 true they won’t b linked as one science. But for people who can manage linking both, these talks make a lot of sense

    • @RIMJANESSOHMALOOG
      @RIMJANESSOHMALOOG Před 2 lety +1

      @@rmcd823 physics is so slow as an epistemological tool

    • @brud1729
      @brud1729 Před 2 lety

      In other words, he's bridging science and hocus pocus. Don't see the purpose, but maybe that's just me.

    • @RIMJANESSOHMALOOG
      @RIMJANESSOHMALOOG Před 2 lety +1

      @I dunno But Keep an open mind. Not everything that exist can be tested or measured. Some of these need thought experiments to make progress towards their truths.

  • @JJRed888
    @JJRed888 Před 3 lety +5

    Just because you can predict from the neural signals (in unconsciousness) what your conscious self will do, does not necessarily mean there is no free will. There is a lot of activity within the unconscious, including unconscious analysis and decision-making. The unconscious is as much a part of the self as the conscious. So we are still making choices (unconsciously).

    • @fenthedog
      @fenthedog Před rokem +3

      You haven't understood the argument mate

    • @johnmartin2813
      @johnmartin2813 Před 5 měsíci

      Much of what we do is routine. But the important decisions are not. Those whose will is the most free are the teachers and the leaders. But even a follower and a student can choose not to follow and not to learn.

    • @JJRed888
      @JJRed888 Před 5 měsíci

      @@fenthedog You probably do not understand the complex decisions that the unconscious makes. We are more than our currently conscious activities. Global Workspace Theory sheds some light on this.

    • @fenthedog
      @fenthedog Před 5 měsíci

      @@JJRed888 LMFAO

  • @lizzieball3795
    @lizzieball3795 Před 3 lety

    Excellent!

  • @JanSandahl
    @JanSandahl Před 5 lety +19

    Donald Hoffman, Bernardo Kastrup & Tom Campbell.

    • @whitleyblaine4017
      @whitleyblaine4017 Před 5 lety +4

      Yes!!! you've found the trio lol. well, i'm new to hoffman. but isn't the internet amazing, how we all find these ideas together?

    • @JanSandahl
      @JanSandahl Před 5 lety +3

      @@whitleyblaine4017 Following the trails, like detectives. :) There are more I think, but these are the first ones that comes to mind as they all have a consciousness based view. A nice triad indeed.

    • @whitleyblaine4017
      @whitleyblaine4017 Před 4 lety

      @Ruby Badilla did you write this out just for us?

    • @janhradecky3141
      @janhradecky3141 Před 3 lety +1

      Never heard of Kastrup and Campbell, I'll check them out 🙂

    • @nathaniel4969
      @nathaniel4969 Před 3 lety +1

      I'd LOVE to see those three together in the same room and discuss.

  • @shailajalokre5013
    @shailajalokre5013 Před 4 lety +2

    Your choices in this life are a result of the intents of your last life. You have free will only when you. realise ‘who are you ?’ Once YOU are separate from this body and mind, then every choice is a free will

  • @lajosbaranyi7333
    @lajosbaranyi7333 Před 4 lety +1

    Free will is the understanding of necessity! Understanding is the non-algorithmic essence of reality, the substance not unlike energy.

  • @AsgersWeb
    @AsgersWeb Před 2 lety

    Just because we aren't responsible for our will doesn't mean we aren't responsible for our actions. "Man can choose to do as he wants but he cannot choose what he wants"

  • @jeronimobeta
    @jeronimobeta Před 3 lety +12

    Nietzsche predicted this kind of thinking. Amazing how powerful a philosopher he is!

    • @arpitthakur45
      @arpitthakur45 Před 2 lety

      can you explain me how and where? i want to know...

    • @arpitthakur45
      @arpitthakur45 Před 2 lety +1

      and i dont think nietzsche himself believed in free will...he says it doesn't exist

    • @jeronimobeta
      @jeronimobeta Před 2 lety

      @@arpitthakur45 hello, yes. I’m sorry I was lazy with my comment. I don’t recall what part of the video triggered me to say that. I agree with you, Nietzsche did not believe in free will hence the theory of eternal return. I guess, maybe, I was thinking about the postmodernist thinking and my comment was meant as a critique for the video.

    • @Dialogos1989
      @Dialogos1989 Před 2 lety +1

      Nietzche stole it from Schopenhauer

    • @arpitthakur45
      @arpitthakur45 Před 2 lety

      @@Dialogos1989 what steal man...people can have similar ideas...

  • @stephenkerensky710
    @stephenkerensky710 Před 2 lety +1

    If there was no free will, no-one would ever be able to give up tobacco, alcohol, drugs or salty/ sugary foods. The trouble with experiments is they only offer choices that don`t engage with real existential need.

  • @okanhoruz758
    @okanhoruz758 Před 4 lety

    until now, we reconstruct our reality in every time ..but we have to reconsider in this issue what ı mean that there are other conception in behind of our perceptions that we cannot perceive

  • @CalendulaF
    @CalendulaF Před 4 lety +1

    Freedom, also in this framework, remains a problematic (self-contradicting?) concept. Hoffman boils it down to some probabilities P,D & A; but where exactly can freedom be found within the concept of probability? There are different ideas of how to interpret probabilities (mainly frequentist vs. Bayesian) but none of them leave room for freedom. The concept of freedom basically pertains to continuations of a given situation. For freedom to be, there need to be (1) more than one continuation (choice-condition) but (2) the choice between them must not be random (authorship-condition). Probabilities, OTOH (also in Markov-chains) violate (2), for there is always randomnes or chancines involved and frankly, it seems that no one has come up (yet) with a good idea of how to fulfill (2).

  • @johnellis7614
    @johnellis7614 Před 5 lety +1

    Our will is controlled by a conscience, which tells us when we are harming ourselves or harming others. And so, if our conviction is that we deserve more, we will always strive to take more even if it harms others. On the other hand, if our conviction is that we deserve less, that we will always give all we can give even if we get harmed in the process.

  • @khaliffoster3777
    @khaliffoster3777 Před 2 lety

    Before looking at the video, free will is consist of past consciousness that you learn and like it as experiences so it becomes a memory that you desire so it will activate the future 7 seconds later in the road, so when you choose that so it will activate in the brain so a signal which you will pick that or not pick that, so that means those 7 seconds is 14 second in a section of the total that is 7 second of the first section and 7 seconds of the second section so base on your desire or it will be only one 7 seconds alone that you prefer so that means 7 second is the true controller of you in future that you will pick that you will not alter, so since it is base on desire so that means free will is the desire to be altered in future. So an experience, so it is same as the above video that is a feedback from the primary starting decision which has a lower level of desire which is a hierarchy that builds up to a higher level of a decision of hierarchy, so same as a baby will desire to touch knife but an adult will not touch knife since it is sharp so it will not enter within a 7-second section of decision because it is negative, so the decision level change like a hierarchy in real life from baby to an adult.

  • @brianoc22
    @brianoc22 Před 3 lety +1

    Hey what about Rogers Penrose's theory on micro tubules generating quantum consciousness, I'm miffed on his behalf.

  • @aangeledarryanani8523
    @aangeledarryanani8523 Před 2 lety +1

    Love this guy

  • @gamezswinger
    @gamezswinger Před 8 dny

    External influences don't have an easy time steering me because of my ADHD!!! LOL! 😄 Conforming? Let's just say it's not my strong suit. Every time I hear Donald Hoffman, I get the impression he doesn't understand the topic he writes and talks about. I love the Einstein quote, "If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough."

  • @michaeldavidson1909
    @michaeldavidson1909 Před 4 lety +1

    Omniscience is a real phenomenon. However, I don't think that in that state there can be a 'someone/personality'' there to ask any questions. The most important thing is always to figure out the right question. A scientist 100 years from now will hopefully have a wider field of view and will be 100 years more able/well equipped to ask the right/better question. It is also said, the answer is in the question.

  • @AaaaaBeeee
    @AaaaaBeeee Před 3 lety

    Donald explains things well although his theories sound similar to those of Tom Campbell from 20 years ago (albeit without the math). I would love to see these great minds discuss their theories. Sadly, Mr Campbell seems to have been ignored by the academic world.

  • @robotaholic
    @robotaholic Před 3 lety +1

    I didn't take this guy very seriously until his recent book

  • @johnmartin2813
    @johnmartin2813 Před 5 měsíci

    Excellent! Without free will there can be no such thing as morality. These people are just seeking for a way to be immoral.
    If everything is determined then I am no longer responsible for my actions. And I can be as irresponsible as I choose to be. No. Sorry. As I want to be. No. Sorry as God wants me to be. No. Sorry. As the Devil wants me to be. How can choose between God and the Devil if I am not free? How can I choose between good and evil if I am not free?

  • @ubivermiscerritulus195
    @ubivermiscerritulus195 Před 4 lety +5

    You're getting warmer. Be not afraid all will be revealed to those with eyes to see and ears to hear.

    • @Cheesesteakfreak
      @Cheesesteakfreak Před 4 lety

      Funny trick, opt out of the conversation and just assert you're right. (Slow clap) Have fun teaching Jesus to five year olds and uneducated people.

  • @carollambert6369
    @carollambert6369 Před 4 lety

    We are each given a number of choices and we make decisions based on those numbers, but because we don’t have an an unlimited number of choices , our will is not unconditionally FREE . What as LOVE got to do with it ??

  • @SimplifiedTruth
    @SimplifiedTruth Před 4 lety +10

    I have no choice but to believe I have choices?

    • @kinngrimm
      @kinngrimm Před 4 lety

      Like ending a statement with a questionmark? Also believe is a choice.

    • @truthseeker2275
      @truthseeker2275 Před 4 lety

      @@kinngrimm "believe is a choice"? Is it possible to believe something you know is not true? Pick something you know is not true (the moon is made of cheese), then choose to believe it. The best you would get is lying about what you believe. You can only believe that of which you are convinced, you can be convinced for good reasons or for bad reasons. Maybe, maybe you have a choice on what you accept as evidence. Maybe, you have a choice in resisting peer pressure when considering the evidence. But ultimately you can only believe what convinces you.

    • @kinngrimm
      @kinngrimm Před 4 lety

      @@truthseeker2275 If what you said would be true then there could hardly be any religions. Reality is screaming in their faces and yet they choose to believe in some stuff written down thousands of years ago from people trying to explain things to the masses without evidence.
      Now i wasn't on the moon so you may think it likely that someone could choose to believe it is 'made/created' out of cheese, just like others believe humans were never there, even though lots of people told their stories from first hand experience, video materials which back then maybe harder to be facked than today and science which sofar has brought marvelous advancement because of what was learened by aiming to get to the moon and learning what space does to materials.
      If you believe what convinces you, it is still a choice to be convinced. I didn't say it was a good choice or a bad choice. From my opinion i would say if a believe helps you survive and master life so you could be happy, then it is good enough for yourself, but generalized and objectivly speaking only those things which are closer to reality have in the long run a chance to help survival.
      Also i am not convinced that indoctrination leaves a lot of room for choices. A mind formed in an environment where believe is higher up the gratification ladder than the scientific method seems to me is therefor predestined for choosing believes over facts. It still is a choice, but within a narrower spectrum of choices.

    • @i6mi6
      @i6mi6 Před 4 lety

      You can choose not to believe

    • @truthseeker2275
      @truthseeker2275 Před 4 lety

      @@i6mi6 Your epistemology determines your means for determining what is convincing, you can change your epistemology, once you do, you can reevaluate your beliefs and change them. If you change your epistemology to something like that of a 4-year-old child then you may be able to choose beliefs (positive or negative) - Many people do not even have an epistemology - they will believe whatever the last person they spoke to tells them.

  • @theotormon
    @theotormon Před 4 lety +2

    At 13:00 he speaks of the darkness. Years ago, wishing to answer the question of free will for myself, I sat in a chair, closed my eyes, and stared hard into the darkness at the root of my thoughts. It was not calm meditation. It was a hard, intense fight, trying to wedge my awareness into the flickers that my thought originated from. After several minutes of this I had the sudden sensation of falling deep into myself. I fell through a tunnel into a world of angels and demons, and for a few minutes it was like I was really there. I am not saying it has no rational explanation, but it was not a dream.

    • @samharper5881
      @samharper5881 Před 4 lety

      Try as you might, you have no way of knowing. You put in a new set of inputs; the outputs were different.

  • @rmcd823
    @rmcd823 Před 2 lety +2

    Dr. David Hoffman left a legacy in spirituality, including free will for superior frequencies.

  • @thomassmith-yu8tz
    @thomassmith-yu8tz Před 3 lety +2

    Q: How did Helen Keller's parents punish her?
    A: By rearranging the furniture.
    Edit: Apparently, there wasn't any furniture in Helen's world.

  • @tobyhdr
    @tobyhdr Před 5 lety +1

    Excellent! Thank you for making this possible and sharing it!!

  • @sajanlucian
    @sajanlucian Před 4 lety

    The real question is not if there is free will or not.
    But Who actually has free will?
    There is no free will for a separate entity, for an individual me. But there is total free will for Conciousness itself. Which is actually what we are.
    The separate me is itself mistaken identity.
    Free will feels like something primal to us. It feels true. Like the feeling of freedom, of happiness. You can't deny that, it doesn't make sense. It is true, but it is actually the flavour of Conciousness, not a posesion or quality of an individual.
    In thoughts, as we represent ourselves as separate entities, althought the feeling of freedom is there (from Conciousness itself) the sense of limitation, of the lack of free will is also there. The separate 'me' idea gives that lack effect. For this idea, there is no free will, just imagined will.
    But because the separate self is not actually there, it can't have or not have free will. When it is belived, all this unending and ultimately not solvable quest is there. And all conclusions are irrelevenant in the end, because they stand on false (apparent) ground. When explored succesfully, the ground is revealed to be just Conciousness - simple, empty, independent of thought. (Rupert Spira has some very beautiful explorations on this subject)
    While I was watching, it became so clear it boils down to identity in the end. Solve your identity and you solve the free will question.

  • @1lyndaenglish1
    @1lyndaenglish1 Před 4 lety +1

    "I doubt if physicists in the 1920s were concerned about the psychological activity of atoms, molecules, or particles, although it seems that Heisenberg came close to Seth’s idea when he considered the free behavior of an electron emitted by a light ray. Albert Einstein, whose own work was rooted in strict causality, found a notion like the free will of an electron untenable, even though much earlier (in 1905) he had laid the foundation for quantum mechanics in his special theory of relativity."
    -The Individual and the Nature of Mass Events Chapter 4: Session 823 (Seth)
    "These opportunities exist theoretically, and yet for particular personalities do not exist for all practical purposes. Within certain limits there is free will. Yet these limits themselves were set, or if you prefer, chosen, by the entity itself for any given present personality; and at the entity level free choice or free will is much more extensive, and really has much more meaning."
    -The Early Sessions Book 1 Session 36 (Seth)

  • @baguire1311
    @baguire1311 Před rokem

    " either our will are determined and we are not responsible for them " but who are we here ???

  • @rituaals9344
    @rituaals9344 Před 3 lety +1

    I started thinking about observer effect today, I thought that space, stars and even the universe do not actually exist If we don’t look at it. There is only a sea of possibilities and probabilities Where everything and nothing exists at the same time

    • @_Allen_Holmes_
      @_Allen_Holmes_ Před 3 lety +1

      Sent me down a huge rabbit hole today, look into the double slit experiment and the affect that observation has on its outcome

  • @bill-zv3gh
    @bill-zv3gh Před 2 lety

    Unless I've missed the point, which I probably have as philosophers tend to dress up their language ("anti-realism means it's not real"' why do they have to use fancy language?) to confuse us, what caused the interconnected conscious agents? Isn't that an infinite regress too?

  • @peteryip947
    @peteryip947 Před 2 lety

    In order to investigate the subject of free will, we shall compare ourselves as physical human beings to other living species, an animal, an insect or a tree. What are the features that we share with them and what differs us from them, by asking these questions, we have been, are and will continue to able to revolutionize our view on consciousness, philosophy and etc. never try to peak the truth through only one hole, because it is destined to fail.

  • @gloriahallelujah1118
    @gloriahallelujah1118 Před rokem

    If I speak in the tongues of men or of angels, but do not have love, I am only a resounding gong or a clanging cymbal. If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing. If I give all I possess to the poor and give over my body to hardship that I may boast, but do not have love, I gain nothing.
    Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.
    Love never fails. But where there are prophecies, they will cease; where there are tongues, they will be stilled; where there is knowledge, it will pass away. For we know in part and we prophesy in part, but when completeness comes, what is in part disappears. When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I put the ways of childhood behind me. For now we see only a reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known.
    And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.

  • @karlivares8401
    @karlivares8401 Před 3 lety

    Excellent ! ❤️ 🧡 💛 💚 💙 💜

  • @ezioberolo2936
    @ezioberolo2936 Před 3 lety

    Donald says at one point that we create reality, ( if we do not look at the chair, it does not exist), but the next moment his model includes the world (W). Where did this world come from? Did we not just create it, according to him, via our perception? Loop de loop?

  • @truthseeker2275
    @truthseeker2275 Před 5 lety +46

    15:37 "Do you want to start with ...." - reality does not care where you want to start. Even if reality leads to "darkness" it is irrelevant. Nowhere here does he propose a mechanism of free will, all he does is criticize determinism. Even if every argument against determinism was 100% valid, it would not prove we have free will. To prove we have free will, you have to prove we have free will.

    • @MrCastleJohnny
      @MrCastleJohnny Před 4 lety +5

      did you have free will to write that?

    • @truthseeker2275
      @truthseeker2275 Před 4 lety +4

      @@MrCastleJohnny No, I wrote it because I had reasons to write it. I used the words I did because of the grammar I was taught, I expressed the Idea because of the information I read, I write it here because this is the video that popped up in my feed, and the words in the video prompted me to write. In exactly the same way, when you wrote the question, you wrote because you have seen it asked before and you had been told it is a smart question. I ask you, do you consider yourself a reasonable person? Either you do things for a reason, in which case you are reasonable, or you do things without a reason in which are you are unreasonable. It is a dichotomy, There is no third option.

    • @truthseeker2275
      @truthseeker2275 Před 4 lety +4

      @Ekalabya Mohanty Read my original comment, Calling me names or claiming something is a brute fact does not make it so. If you do want to understand you should maybe see if you can steelman the argument against free will. i.e. switch sides, understand why, then see if you can switch back.

    • @BygoneT
      @BygoneT Před 4 lety +2

      @@truthseeker2275 A world where free will exists and one where it doesn't are not distinguishable by observation. I don't think there's any use in debating the issue of free will if you can't settle it.

    • @truthseeker2275
      @truthseeker2275 Před 4 lety

      @@BygoneT That is an interesting claim, I am not sure if you are correct or not; Do you have any reasoning behind why you say it is unobservable?

  • @priyakulkarni9583
    @priyakulkarni9583 Před 4 lety +1

    Mind is wave and matter is particle!! Consciousness is in between wave and particle and quantum mechanical ! When you are aware of matter the mind disappears and vice versa ! Matter is there when we see only!

  • @KipIngram
    @KipIngram Před 5 měsíci

    Just because we don't "intend" brain activity and are "unaware" of brain activity does not in any way show that the brain activity is not itself an effect of our free choices. We just don't know yet how it works.
    Also, if you want to believe that "no free will" idea, then you have to let go of judging people. No matter what people do, how they treat you, what you read that they've done - you can't regard them as a villain or as a saint. Because they didn't *choose* it - it would be wrong to assign them any credit or any blame.

  • @therealabelmagwitch
    @therealabelmagwitch Před rokem

    To say that a sense-impression-based model of reality is produced in the mind does not mean we create reality; it only means your model does cannot perfectly represent reality. Kant could have explained this to Hoffmann in a more lengthy German fashion.

  • @staciesheppard2048
    @staciesheppard2048 Před 4 lety +18

    Oh, to be a pigeon!

  • @MusingsFromTheJohn00
    @MusingsFromTheJohn00 Před rokem

    Quote: “'You', your joys and your sorrows, your memories and your ambitions, your sense of personal identity and free will, are in fact no more than the behavior of a vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules.”
    This is absolutely true but it does not remove the fact that those molecules that make up your body and mind form an intelligent system which has free will and that intelligent system is you. These people that somehow want to separate you from what you are and then say you have no control over yourself are just literally being dumb. They are looking at obvious overwhelming evident truths and then bending over backwards to come up with ways of denying those truths. One of the ways of doing this is trying to define free will as something it is not.
    Free will is in fact the ability of an intelligent system to make decisions that intelligent system is capable of making without an unreasonable degree of influence upon that decision making from something outside that intelligent system. Now, where you draw the boundaries of an intelligent system can be pretty arbitrary, what constitutes an unreasonable degree of influence is subjective and relative, and there can even be disagreement over what decisions an intelligent system can or cannot make, this definition is the actual free will we observe and use.
    This free will is critically linked to ethical moral values, which are all about to what degree decisions we make are good and/or bad. For ethical moral values to apply it requires a person to be making free will decisions, because if they have no free will over a decision then they are not ethically morally responsible for that decision over which they have no control.
    Just because, if I had the technology, tools, and access to use them to go inside your brain and stimulate part of it to cause you extreme anger or extreme joy, that does not remove the fact you have free will. It just means that understanding how you brain works I was able to reach inside your brain and take away your free will over that event. Just because we figure out how your brain works does not separate you from your brain, you are not a separate spirit just occupying the same space as your brain, you are your brain and your brain is you.

  • @andrewstallard6927
    @andrewstallard6927 Před 4 lety +2

    I am not so sure why an "anti-realist" approach to chance would seem so hard to accept. It strikes me as almost common sense.
    Probability is logic; it's not physics. Probabilities depend on your state of mind, and not just the physical properties of the system. How else do you explain the Monty Hall problem?

  • @asarubeats1959
    @asarubeats1959 Před 4 lety

    Free will is the coin of the realm!

  • @cmvamerica9011
    @cmvamerica9011 Před 3 lety +1

    You can do what you want, but you can’t want what you want.

  • @sngscratcher
    @sngscratcher Před 4 lety +1

    "Free will" is the engine that drives the evolution of consciousness. Free will creates "conscious mutation
    events" that are different from ordinary instinctual "choices." As consciousness recognizes and embraces novel choices, it evolves in complexity. Without free will, consciousness cannot evolve.

    • @alanross2243
      @alanross2243 Před 4 lety

      Open-minded Skeptic not sure I agree. I assume you are referring to “enlightened” FW choices leading to that evolution. Unfortunately that does not prove free will. How do you know they were really free will. Just because you think there “wholesome”. Our bodies have evolved for millions of years. To the “positive”. Is that free will. I don’t think it proves anything.

    • @tajzikria5307
      @tajzikria5307 Před rokem

      Actually the opposite.

  • @billdanosky
    @billdanosky Před 4 lety +1

    Are there any sort-of "accumulationists"? That's to say, believing the brain is physically formed by prior thoughts and therefore building it's physiology on sequential layers of habit? A scientist was once referring to a pronounced lobe in Einstein's brain that showed he played a stringed instrument (a violin), so I reasoned the thought creates the brain. So you have thoughts, make decisions, and your brain builds or evolves accordingly as you build a skill or develop a knowledge base on a topic. This informs your future thoughts since they are now physically ingrained, making the prediction of choices possible by observing the structure and operation of the brain. Not sure how the bedrock foundation of structure/thought arrives. Prenatally? That would infer a vast amount of stacking, inherited memory/instinct, etc. It doesn't necessarily conflict with the theory here; just answers that chicken-and-egg question: Thought precedes brain physiology whether it's "physically real" or not.

    • @billdanosky
      @billdanosky Před 4 lety

      Should have said, "infers the *possibility* of a vast amount of stacked-up, inherited memory."

    • @billdanosky
      @billdanosky Před 4 lety

      Could that be the origin of species?

  • @blackhat856
    @blackhat856 Před 9 měsíci

    If you’re looking at it with a mortal’s view…if perfect and eternal

  • @ElectricQualia
    @ElectricQualia Před 4 lety +3

    Plantiga’s evolutionary argument against naturalism is pretty much the same.

  • @cmvamerica9011
    @cmvamerica9011 Před 2 lety

    A miracle is something you don’t understand but seems to defy the laws of physics;

  • @LurkingCrassZero
    @LurkingCrassZero Před 2 lety

    11:33 reminds me of the sephira. As above, so below.

  • @SecondComingTwice
    @SecondComingTwice Před 5 lety

    How did the machine "predict" the outcome of the five dice I just threw that took only two rolls each to get the desired ones and sixes twice in a row?

    • @JohnnyArtPavlou
      @JohnnyArtPavlou Před 4 lety +1

      SecondComingTwice, how did you come to desire the ones and the sixes?

  • @harryh628
    @harryh628 Před 5 lety

    its funny really cause ive found quite curious by just redefining it as the will of freedom instead of free will. cause it seems to very well get rid of the freeness in it by replacing it with the will and this seems to say that its our will to be free instead of the freeness of the will. like saying instead that we are the boat on the river instead of the river itself. we are choosing where to go instead of being lead by that will. but then maybe its like one of those minimalist things where you cant get below a certain pnt withoit getting away from the pnt again.. but annys the shit from me is that this stuff is hardly spoken about in neuro classes, like come on really. its easier to beat round the bush i guess.

  • @ericreilly7669
    @ericreilly7669 Před rokem +1

    didn't mathematics evolve from our experience of the sensory world? so how we do know this mathematical proof is true?

  • @bournazianvahan
    @bournazianvahan Před 2 lety

    Freedom means increased probabilities for free will; subjugation means restriction on the probabilities for free will.

  • @downhillphilm.6682
    @downhillphilm.6682 Před 3 lety

    i always saw 'free will' metaphorically as a pin ball machine. a pin ball (thought, decision, etc) is launched, it bounces around (cognition) and the results (points, etc) is chance. then the ball is returned to the launch position.....but who launched the pin ball? who/what crafted the pin ball? who built the machine? and who created the entity who built the machine, etc? arrrgh....

  • @binali2775
    @binali2775 Před 3 lety +19

    Short condensed answer; we are consciousness and consciousness is God.

    • @kirstinstrand6292
      @kirstinstrand6292 Před 3 lety +4

      Much too tidy!

    • @daithiocinnsealach3173
      @daithiocinnsealach3173 Před 3 lety +3

      No way to ever prove this. It's just a hypothesis, and Hoffman admits he's probably wrong, but wants to see where it will take him. Perhaps he's just being humble for the sake of his colleagues who don't take him seriously, but he admits we are in darkness on every side. It's comforting to think we are God or from God, and claim this or that experience as evidence, but this is very poor evidence indeed. Taking as a whole it's clear that humans don't have any real idea about our metaphysical origins. It's just too far beyond our limited scope. That's a scary thought for many though. More comforting to imagine a universe infused with special meaning for me...

    • @ianclarke3627
      @ianclarke3627 Před 3 lety

      @@daithiocinnsealach3173 well put

    • @mrroberts9230
      @mrroberts9230 Před 3 lety +1

      Another thing is everyone uses the word God to mean something different. Why should it be comforting to think we are God? Only thing I can think of is that you don’t mean the same thing as I do when you use the word. Some people use it to mean “old man in the clouds with beard” and they seriously believe anyone would ever argue against that not existing? Obvious conclusion. Not sure why they might suspect the other person means something different.

    • @JesusChrist2000BC
      @JesusChrist2000BC Před 3 lety +1

      @@daithiocinnsealach3173 Every single comment you've left has been super materialist and you refuse to acknowledge any evidence that you are wrong.

  • @allenmorgan4309
    @allenmorgan4309 Před 4 lety +6

    Nothing in life is either or; he said the truth at the beginning. We have freewill but it is limited. There is such a thing as agency and we are conscious of our choices and within the parameters of our abilities we can make choices. In my own experience when I was younger I made a lot of bad choices based on my conditioning but once I overcame my issues I started making better choices, in other words once I began to overcome my conditioned mind I gained more freedom. I learned that from the Buddha. We are "programmed" by our conditioning, genetic/environmental, but we have the agency to transcend our conditioning. No machine can do that, animals cannot do that; that is what makes us different than the rest of nature. We have agency. We can be free but we have to work at becoming free.

    • @gorblin70
      @gorblin70 Před 3 lety +2

      learning isn't gaining freedom it's just making you a more capable machine.

    • @tonya5468
      @tonya5468 Před rokem

      You have articulated the most useful perspective for living well and developing as a person.

  • @rkraja6603
    @rkraja6603 Před 4 lety

    You are free to act depending on your necessity which comes from inside or your desire which comes from outside. Your belief of free will comes from your conviction that you control the outcome of your action. If the outcome is to your liking, you have free will, if not then you come up with hundreds of theories why your free will may be a suspect! Man is the biggest storyteller; when you live nothing happens, it is only when you recount even a trivial incident, you embellish as much as you can get away with, in actual fact nothing happened. Never read people's autographies.

  • @BradHolkesvig
    @BradHolkesvig Před 4 lety +1

    Amos 4
    13: For lo, he who forms the mountains, and creates the wind, and declares to man what is his thought;
    Isaiah 45:7
    I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the Lord do all these things.
    Deuteronomy 32
    39: "`See now that I, even I, am he, and there is no god beside me; I kill and I make alive; I wound and I heal; and there is none that can deliver out of my hand.
    Exodus 4:
    10: But Moses said to the LORD, "Oh, my Lord, I am not eloquent, either heretofore or since thou hast spoken to thy servant; but I am slow of speech and of tongue."
    11: Then the LORD said to him, "Who has made man's mouth? Who makes him dumb, or deaf, or seeing, or blind? Is it not I, the LORD?
    12: Now therefore go, and I will be with your mouth and teach you what you shall speak."
    Psalm 33
    4: For the word of the LORD is upright; and all his work is done in faithfulness.
    5: He loves righteousness and justice; the earth is full of the steadfast love of the LORD.
    6: By the word of the LORD the heavens were made, and all their host by the breath of his mouth.
    7: He gathered the waters of the sea as in a bottle; he put the deeps in storehouses.
    8: Let all the earth fear the LORD, let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of him!
    9: For he spoke, and it came to be; he commanded, and it stood forth.
    10: The LORD brings the counsel of the nations to naught; he frustrates the plans of the peoples.
    11: The counsel of the LORD stands for ever, the thoughts of his heart to all generations.
    12: Blessed is the nation whose God is the LORD, the people whom he has chosen as his heritage!
    13: The LORD looks down from heaven, he sees all the sons of men;
    14: from where he sits enthroned he looks forth on all the inhabitants of the earth,
    15: he who fashions the hearts of them all, and observes all their deeds.
    16: A king is not saved by his great army; a warrior is not delivered by his great strength.
    17: The war horse is a vain hope for victory, and by its great might it cannot save.

  • @yoso585
    @yoso585 Před 4 lety

    It all depends on the perspective you view it from. Notice I did not say “choose to” view it from. I was watching a documentary a while back, Muslims in a mid eastern country being asked what they would do if they became aware a sibling was an atheist. Those answers varied, but I was fascinated with how it seemed no one could grasp the concept of no Allah. It’s as with some aboriginal tribes that have no word for war. You are your environment it seems. Shit to think on.