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@secularmerlin
"Caused" not equate to determinism. Mental causation.
Yes it is. The state of the universe at a given point in time "A" causes me to consider options by reasoning with my subjective human mind "B" which causes me me to take an action "C". Cause and effect intact, a choice was made as per the definition of free will.
Is there a way that an arrangement of ordinary matter could have a desire? Can a computer be progrmmed to want to win, and feel disappointmrnt when it loses? It's trivia to mock up something that gives the outward signs, but to get a machine to have subjective states.. no one knows how to do that.A desire is a physical thing in that it is a brainstate and brainstate would seem to be achieved through chemical and electrical means. Since electricity and chemical compounds are both physical things desires must also be considered so. The question remains irrelevant.
We can therefore surmise that desire has a physical component.
can't we surmise a non-physical component is involved?
I prefer to think
operating alongside ordinary physical cause and effect
It does involve having to think about what a 'self' is.
What make you believe "reasons" are deterministic? You're conflating immaterial causes with material causes and concluding that all causes have material explanations.
Without a rigorous agreed upon definition we cannot be certain we are even having the same conversation. I'm afraid the definition must come first. Also I am no more claiming that a leaf does not have a self than I am claiming that you do. I am only saying that there is no particular reason to suspect that either you or a leaf has freewill.a self, an immaterial, ethereal 'thing' I won't try to define yet
So you can't answer whether it feels like we have free will or not?
Often during the 'um...' period I am not sure what I am doing