Herein lies the problem, I think. You've changed the definition of free will to fit your philosophy. Many people do this when posed this question, though not to the same degree of complexity.Eldritch Warlord said:The degrees of understanding (from least to greatest)
I believe that I have free will.
I doubt that I have free will.
I know that I have free will.
You fall in the middle OP. You're doubting free will because you know that our thoughts and desires are shaped by forces beyond our control. I know that this truth doesn't matter, because free will is the ability to do what you want. Why you want to do something is irrelevant.
Also, I don't think the question lacks utility. If people's actions are subject to natural law, they can ultimately be understood using the scientific method, which is the only reliable tool I know of.
This makes no sense to me. If the future is certain, then people aren't free to make their own decisions. The decisions would be predetermined, no?Blue_vision said:This.Demented Teddy said:Oh god not this bullshit again.
Look, just because we are the product of our experiences DOES NOT mean we do not have free will.
You can still decide and choose, you always have and that is also what has shaped you into what you are today.
But obviously you can't (physically) rocket off into space by sheer epic willpower and disco moves. You're constrained in any circumstance, but you always have a choice of what to do.
But I will say that the future isn't some kind of big cloud of unknown; the future is certain, it's just that nobody knows what that future is, and are free to make whatever decisions they want because that's what they're supposed to do. So... STOP BEING SHEEP, PEOPLE!
I am not saying people don't make decisions, which seems to be a common misunderstanding when this question is posed.