We are slaves to our biology, environment and time.
ALL options/choices are available through these pressures.
BIOLOGY: We can choose our types of mates, but it's our bodies that FORCES us to be attracted to others. We can choose which videogame we want to play, but it's our bodies that FORCES us to want to best obstacles and climb up the social hierarchy (in such a case, through proxy, but basically it's still the same).
ENVIRONMENT: How we grow up, through our experiences, the choices we make are defined by them. Each event in our lives pushes us in one direction or other and ends up offering relevant "choices" based on that. A child living in a war-torned country doesn't have the same choices as another who lives elsewhere for instance
TIME: Could someone have chosen to like videogames if he/she lived 500 years ago? Choices are dependent of any given time to just simply... exist.
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So, free will? Yeah, I guess. If by free choice you mean being in a room with a hundred doors available to open, but not choosing one means you'll starve to death and seeing another hundred doors, which are locked.
So to me, free will, being limited in such ways, cannot be truly called "free will".
Maybe that's why I'm an absurdist (Sisyphus and all that)
ALL options/choices are available through these pressures.
BIOLOGY: We can choose our types of mates, but it's our bodies that FORCES us to be attracted to others. We can choose which videogame we want to play, but it's our bodies that FORCES us to want to best obstacles and climb up the social hierarchy (in such a case, through proxy, but basically it's still the same).
ENVIRONMENT: How we grow up, through our experiences, the choices we make are defined by them. Each event in our lives pushes us in one direction or other and ends up offering relevant "choices" based on that. A child living in a war-torned country doesn't have the same choices as another who lives elsewhere for instance
TIME: Could someone have chosen to like videogames if he/she lived 500 years ago? Choices are dependent of any given time to just simply... exist.
****
So, free will? Yeah, I guess. If by free choice you mean being in a room with a hundred doors available to open, but not choosing one means you'll starve to death and seeing another hundred doors, which are locked.
So to me, free will, being limited in such ways, cannot be truly called "free will".
Maybe that's why I'm an absurdist (Sisyphus and all that)