Teeside SitP Open-Mike Night 4 th August 2016

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Transcription:

Teeside SitP Open-Mike Night 4 th August 2016 Ian Glendinning Me & My Free Will Introduction Me and where I m coming from (1 min) My general agenda and typical examples of interest (1 min) One specific example topic for today Denial of Free Will (5 mins) Q&A (5 mins)

Me & My Free Will Me Then Early Life - Science Geek at school Maths / Phys / Chem / Bio eg Carl Sagan (Cosmos) / Jacob Bronowski (Ascent of Man) influential Atheist & Secularist all my 60-year life. Humanist since 1981. Day Job - Engineer & Technologist since 1977 Obviously physical science based, but ingenuity also about getting things done with people & management generally. Lived and worked in Australia, USA & Norway & well-travelled, Russia, China, South-East Asia, Middle-East, South America. Life s Work ongoing project researching Knowledge Blogging as Psybertron since 9/11 2001. www.psybertron.org What, why and how do we know? And as @psybertron on Twitter: Equal-opportunity infidel. Keeping science and humanism honest

Me & My Free Will Me Now Member pro-humanism, secularism & rationalism organisations BHA / NSS / Conway Hall Ethical Society / SITP etc. and active in local groups. Supporter of pro-science campaigns Sense-About-Science / Ask-For-Evidence etc. Trustee & Board Member of the Rationalist Association / New Humanist Magazine. Plus Academic Research Reading, writing and events. Not just Science & Technology but also humanities in general, literature, history, politics and philosophy & metaphysics generally, philosophy of science and in particular Ontology (what exists in the world) Epistemology (the significance of what we can know about the world) Ethics & Quality (what should we do for the best) Sceptical Position - For Science and Rationality but against Scientism. The narrow dogma or arrogance - that science and objective logic is the privileged answer to anything and everything that matters (after Wittgenstein, Gödel, etc.)

Me & My Free Will My Pet Topics Evolution including Memetic Evolution of Knowledge & Belief. Memes & memetics. Echo-chambers and conspiracy theories. Understanding & Rationalisation of Belief, Faith & Political Dogma. Simple vs Simplistic; Binary arguments vs Subtle & complex considerations. Attention-grabbing / headline-reporting of scientific discoveries. Public scientist rock-stars on the one side, social-media-enabled advocates & critics on the other. Decision-Making & Governance literally Cybernetics (pre-1940 s, before AI etc.) What information we have, how we interpret it as knowledge, and how we base decisions to act upon it? Systems view. From Individual choices to super-national government & policy. Decidability: scientifically, even statistically, undecidable questions (Taleb). Complexity in Layers. Reality of iterative emergent properties & strange loops (Hofstadter). Late-binding definitions. Too-greedy reductionism (Dennett). Broad & narrow definitions. Sorta two-way causation. Objective Identity distinct from ourselves. Philosophical (and Political) Problems at the Bleeding Edges of Science. Cosmogeny, big bang, multiverse(s), inflation, evolution of our universe. The appearance of design. Anthropic perspectives. Scientific dogma. Incompleteness of standard particle model(s). Physics as information. Reality of time & causation. Maths as part of the universe and its history. The evolution of laws and constants. (Unger & Smolin, Nagel, Sheldrake) God & Faith vs Science & Reason Wars. The Four Horsemen, Islamism, etc. ( nuff said) Brain-Mind, Consciousness & Free-Will. (Next.)

We naturally think of our free will as real. Our mind and its workings are the thing we experience most directly? (Though obviously we do so subjectively & psychologically. Pretty much a la Descartes in fact cogito ergo sum but he went on to propose dualism which I don t.) We reject the idea that we are pre-programmed and we reject the idea that the world is pre-determined independent of our own decisions and actions (obviously limited by the physical causation of our power and influence)? Without such free-will we d think of ourselves as mindless zombies. We d be disappointed if we believed our conscious mind and our will didn t affect the real world and that our impression was just an illusion evolved to make us somehow feel psychologically better about our actual powerlessness?

Caricature or Noddy argument. The Hard Problem: The subjective experience of our mind (qualia) are pretty much impossible to explain objectively in terms of physical states of our brains and sense data. The so-called Hard Problem philosophically, Impossible almost by definition scientifically. Free-will is dead. Let s bury it. (random scientist) Pretty much everything depends in science on the physical understanding that all causation arises from the 4 fundamental forces between the standard model particles and the statistical predictability of quantum mechanics. Every future state is determined by previous states and these laws. (Even if something more fundamental underlies these, eg strings, supersymmetry, etc.) This leaves no gap for our subjective input not being pre-determined.

The Libet Experiment Benjamin Libet (1970 s and repeated many times since famously with a live Skeptic Conference audience by Susan Blackmore of Meme Machine fame?) The brain physically responds and reacts to a stimulus 350-500ms before any conscious mind report of awareness and any evident decision to act. Seems conclusive? that the actions of the conscious mind are epiphenomena, postrationalisations, after the event, but not in the direct real-time line of fire? The noddy view from science must be right? Better conclusion from Libet? Consciousness and mind are many layered. Information cascades upwards through the layers from the physical sensors to the increasingly-conscious higher-supervisory levels. Various subconscious / reflex / pre-programmed actions are indeed initiated on the way through. Exactly which, depends on the type of stimulation and nature of the action. Think of the way our conscious mind acts as an evolved & learned capability. Think of free-will rather as free-won t? (Daniel Wegner 2002) Think of a top-class tennis player returning a serve? Most of the action is pre-wired (genetic capabilities, developed skills, learned tactics, experience and anticipation). The time after the ball leaves the opponent s racquet is used only to fine-tune or abort the service return. We re not going to waste resources on laborious calculations and unnecessary timeconsuming steps when we ve evolved a better solution to the problem.

Recent / Current / Topical Unger (Philosopher) & Smolin (Scientist) - The Singular Universe and the Reality of Time (2015) Chap-7 A symptom of the metaphysical folly [where time and laws of causation are outside physics, is that] sense impressions are incompatible with [our model] therefore qualia cannot exist. But the one thing we can be sure of is that qualia do exist. Baggini (Philosopher) Freedom Regained (2015) Sam Harris, [seemingly] the most fervent denier of free-will, says: The fact that our choices depend on prior causes does not mean they don t matter [or don t exist]. Human choice is as important as fanciers of free will believe we are not the authors or our thoughts and actions in the way that people generally suppose.

Recent / Current / Topical Harris Free Will (2012, my own 2014 notes): Does he really only say Free will is an illusion? or Free-will doesn t really exist? No he doesn t. He says Free will is actually more than an illusion. That we are the conscious source of most of our thoughts and actions is false. Dennett (Horseman#3) vs Harris (Horseman#4) Dennett Critique of Harris Free Will (Jan 2014) Harris Letter in response to Dennett (Feb 2014) Decidedly acrimonious and public spat between friends with a common enemy, but real & deep disagreement on Free Will. Harris Waking Up Podcast Free Will & Dennett Revisited (Jul 2016) Return to friendly and respectful dialogue, but still a good representation of [most of] their actual differences.

Free Will is as Real as You Are Mainstream science conclusion is often that our free-will cannot exist. It must be some kind of illusion or epiphenomenon. To reject that argument one is accused of being a wishful denial of accepted science. If [Standard Model (4 forces, particles & QM)] = True, Then [Free-will] = False. Nothing wrong with the Logic, but there is more than one Conclusion. There may be something missing from the standard model(s) of mainstream science The denial of the existence of free-will is itself a scientific dogma or arrogance. Agreeing that it s simply not yet very well explained by current science is more honest. Recognising the more honest position rather than sticking to the dogma is healthier for the future of science (and everything else). Science really does need philosophy too. Compatibilism after Dennett - Sure, physical laws are deterministic, but the networks & layers of causation in mind, consciousness and free-will are evidently complex. Don t be too quick to define the objects you are dealing with. Don t be too greedy in reducing the problem to deterministic rules in terms of those objects. The best explanation for our subjective experience of conscious will may not be one reduced solely to terms of the lowest physical objects. Suspend disbelief. We have just the required amount of free-will we can use.