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Post 40

Friday, December 21, 2007 - 9:51amSanction this postReply
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Assuming that despite the humorous language, you actually believe that, I have a couple of questions.

We all agree that the law of causality is the law of identify applied to action and that there are no exceptions to the operation of causality.

But, are there any facts about humans, such that if you observed them to be different from what you presently observe, would lead you to a different view of volition or determinism?

Granting for a moment, or for an eon, that all human thought and behavior are purposeful, what observable facts (apart from that generalization, if any) provide the basis of your view?

[Edit: Sorry, posts intervened. I was referring here to your post 37.]
(Edited by Jeff Perren on 12/21, 9:53am)


Post 41

Friday, December 21, 2007 - 9:57amSanction this postReply
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Bill,

I don't think anyone would deny that when you cast your ballot for Bidinotto, you're "choosing" him for president, EVEN THOUGH it is quite clear that, given your political values, you couldn't have chosen otherwise.

You're guilty of over-determining (over-simplifying) the context -- in order to arbitrarily acquire more explanatory power. In this case, you're giving political values omnipotence over one's decision. But what about those folks whose political values are superceded by other values?

For instance, let's say that you are a conservative homosexual, and the conservative candidate for president is a staunch homophobe hell-bent on criminalizing your sexual preference. You might vote Obama (rather than voting according to your political values). The point is that "value-determinism" -- in order to have any kind of adequate explanatory power -- requires an omniscience regarding what has been referred to, philosophically, as "privileged access."

And that's not feasible.

Ed


Post 42

Friday, December 21, 2007 - 10:09amSanction this postReply
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Bill, in post 39 you write:

... under those circumstances, you wished that you had valued your "abstract values," but in fact, you didn't value them.
Yes. I did wish (read: desire, want) to "value" my abstract moral values -- but that not-acted-upon wish-desire-want doesn't mean I didn't value them (at all). Wishes, desires, and wants are instances of mentally-valuing something (over nothing).

Bill, do you think that it is possible to "mentally-value" something (over nothing)? In other words, is the mind capable of its own mode of action? Are our powers of awareness in any way active?

I think that you are "determined" to answer "yes" to these questions -- questions which provide a scope of action too broad to fit into your physically act-oriented schematism called "value-determinism."

Ed


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Post 43

Friday, December 21, 2007 - 11:23amSanction this postReply
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Bill,
Let me see if I have this right: a person has free will to the extent that he/she is not prevented by outside influences from making the deterministic choices that he/she necessarily makes based on the values that he/she has as a consequence of antecedent events.  Is that accurate?
Thanks,
Glenn


Post 44

Friday, December 21, 2007 - 12:10pmSanction this postReply
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     I am quite confused about Bill's post #37 ending response. Not what he means therein, so much as to how this view is considered by him to NOT be considered plain ol' original (albeit being a new perspective on decision-making re alternatives perceived) Determinism. --- Add in, not to mention what 'choice' and 'volition' unequivocationally mean therein. Seems to me they have new, and undefined, 'meanings' different from the traditional ones in this ancient subject.

     Can anyone explain these conundrums in this ostensibly 3rd perspective called 'compatibilism'?

LLAP
J:D


Post 45

Friday, December 21, 2007 - 2:05pmSanction this postReply
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John,

For example, you could choose to keep or delete this page; while a compatibilist will not try to deny that whatever choice you make will have been predetermined since the beginning of time, they will argue that this choice that you make is an example of free will because no one is forcing you to make whatever choice you make.

In contrast, someone could be holding a gun to your head and tell you that unless you delete the page, they will kill you; to a compatibilist, that is an example of a lack of free will. (The compatibilist account sometimes includes internal compulsions such as kleptomania or addiction.)
From:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compatibilism

Recap:
For (at least some) compatibilists, "free will" means: unforced (i.e., without compulsion from another human) personal choice. In other words, free will is akin to autonomy or independence (from another's compulsion).

Does that include you, Bill?

Ed


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Post 46

Friday, December 21, 2007 - 2:46pmSanction this postReply
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Bill D. wrote in post #27:
The biggest mistake people make in this area is to equate teleological determinism with mechanistic determinism. To say that human being's action is necessitated by his value judgments is to say that he is determined not by efficient causation but by final causation.
Big mistake?? Other than you, and maybe Roger Bissell, I don't know of any determinists who have attributed any causation to teleology or final causation.

Here are two articles on 'determinism' on popular websites:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Determinism
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/determinism-causal/
Neither article attributes any causation to teleology or final causation.



Post 47

Friday, December 21, 2007 - 3:09pmSanction this postReply
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Good point, Merlin.

Ed


Post 48

Friday, December 21, 2007 - 4:02pmSanction this postReply
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Glenn, in Post 43 you asked,
Bill,
Let me see if I have this right: a person has free will to the extent that he/she is not prevented by outside influences from making the deterministic choices that he/she necessarily makes based on the values that he/she has as a consequence of antecedent events. Is that accurate?
Not, it isn't

Glenn, I don't think I ever said that people have free will -- at least not free will in the Objectivist or classical sense of the term -- which is the ability to choose either of two alternatives under the same conditions. According to philosopher Richard Taylor (and Nathaniel Branden -- see his book The Psychology of Self-Esteem), "In the case of an action that is free, it must be such that it is caused by the agent who performs it, but such that no antecedent conditions were sufficient for performing just that action." (Taylor, Metaphysics, 1963, p. 50.) Since I deny that human beings possess free will according to this definition, I am a determinist.

Ed, in Post 39 you wrote,
Yes. I did wish (read: desire, want) to "value" my abstract moral values -- but that not-acted-upon wish-desire-want doesn't mean I didn't value them (at all). Wishes, desires, and wants are instances of mentally-valuing something (over nothing).
Okay, but in that case, what you "valued" is valuing those abstract moral values. You did not value the abstract moral values themselves. If you had, you would have acted on them.

In Post 45, you wrote,
For (at least some) compatibilists, "free will" means: unforced (i.e., without compulsion from another human) personal choice. In other words, free will is akin to autonomy or independence (from another's compulsion).
Yes, according to the compatibilist definition, an action "freely willed" is any action that is chosen by the moral agent. If you were forced by a robber or the government to give up your money, then you didn't choose to give it up, in which case, you didn't act "of your own free will." In colloquial terms, to say that you did it "of your own free will" simply means that you weren't compelled to take the action by another agent. But this is not the classical or Objectivist view of free will (as defined by Richard Taylor above). According to the latter definition, I am not an advocate of "free will."

- Bill

(Edited by William Dwyer on 12/21, 4:30pm)


Post 49

Friday, December 21, 2007 - 4:43pmSanction this postReply
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Jeff,

In Post 40, you asked,
But are there any facts about humans, such that if you observed them to be different from what you presently observe, would lead you to a different view of volition or determinism?
Good question. I don't know. Maybe the observation that we chose our actions without any reason, goal or purpose. But it's hard to imagine what that would be like. Moreover, it wouldn't make any sense for us to have the capacity to choose, if we didn't choose for the sake of obtaining values.
Granting for a moment, or for an eon, that all human thought and behavior are purposeful, what observable facts (apart from that generalization, if any) provide the basis of your view?
Well, introspective observation reveals that I choose for the sake of obtaining values -- that a value is the object of my own choices and action, and would appear to be the object of other people's as well. I'm not sure what else to say. Did you want to elaborate?

- Bill

Post 50

Friday, December 21, 2007 - 5:15pmSanction this postReply
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Thank you for responding to my questions.

"Well, introspective observation reveals that I choose for the sake of obtaining values -- that a value is the object of my own choices and action, and would appear to be the object of other people's as well." Bill

I agree with this, although I'm not sure I would label it an observation rather than a conclusion. But I don't see any good reason to create a distraction by quibbling over that at this point.

"Did you want to elaborate?" Bill


Before presenting my own views in detail, I just want to make sure I understand your position as well as possible. So, if I interpret you correctly, you would only regard free will as existing, i.e. a choice to be 'free', if it were chosen for no reason, had no motivation, whatsoever. I.e. it's only free in this sense if it's uncaused (by the person's goal-seeking). Since that's impossible -- at minimum it would violate the Law of Causality -- then determinism must be true.

But if I recall correctly, Rand answered this by the simple expedient of questioning that premise. That is, that conditional itself requires validation, doesn't it?

Also, doesn't that view rest on the supposition that there is in fact only one relevant type of causation, that which we associate with non-living entities, and which has been misnamed here "mechanistic"? It's difficult to see any distinction on the basis of which one could define teleological causation.

In the latter case, the entity is acting for an end, but the action is just as determined. It appears, based on this view, that humans have no more self-regulating capacity than a cabbage, it's just that we are aware of the process, whereas a cabbage is not.

I.e. this appears, as I noted in my earlier question, to be nothing more than conscious selection, not choice as that word is used outside philosophical tracts. (That use could, of course, encapsulate a prejudice. That's what we are here debating.)



(Edited by Jeff Perren on 12/21, 5:24pm)


Post 51

Saturday, December 22, 2007 - 12:25pmSanction this postReply
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Jeff wrote,
Before presenting my own views in detail, I just want to make sure I understand your position as well as possible. So, if I interpret you correctly, you would only regard free will as existing, i.e. a choice to be 'free', if it were chosen for no reason, had no motivation, whatsoever.
Yes, because in being motivated to choose an action, one cannot be motivated simultaneously to choose an alternative action. A motivation is necessarily preferential, whereas a free choice is one in which the moral agent is capable of choosing either of two alternatives under the same conditions (including the same motivation, the same values, etc.) I don't see how this is possible.
I.e. it's only free in this sense if it's uncaused (by the person's goal-seeking). Since that's impossible -- at minimum it would violate the Law of Causality -- then determinism must be true.
Right, a living organism that is not goal-directed is a contradiction in terms.
But if I recall correctly, Rand answered this by the simple expedient of questioning that premise. That is, that conditional itself requires validation, doesn't it?
Yes, but it's already been validated. According to Objectivism, life is a process of goal-directed action.
Also, doesn't that view rest on the supposition that there is in fact only one relevant type of causation, that which we associate with non-living entities, and which has been misnamed here "mechanistic"? It's difficult to see any distinction on the basis of which one could define teleological causation.

In the latter case, the entity is acting for an end, but the action is just as determined. It appears, based on this view, that humans have no more self-regulating capacity than a cabbage, it's just that we are aware of the process, whereas a cabbage is not.
We have considerably more "self-regulating capacity" than a cabbage, because we are far more adaptable to our environment. But this adaptability does not imply the ability to choose behavior that we do not value.
I.e. this appears, as I noted in my earlier question, to be nothing more than conscious selection, not choice as that word is used outside philosophical tracts. (That use could, of course, encapsulate a prejudice. That's what we are here debating.)
Well, one difference between choice and selection is that choice is a conscious, conceptual activity, whereas selection needn't be (e.g., natural selection), but I'm not sure what relevance that has for the present discussion.

- Bill



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Post 52

Saturday, December 22, 2007 - 3:59pmSanction this postReply
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I'm ending my part in this discussion.  I can't make heads or tails of what Bill is talking about.  Specifically, right up until you make a choice there are more than one alternative.  Under Bill's determinism, what is the cause that necessitates the choice of one alternative over the other?  He says it's the value, that which you act to gain/keep.  Whatever you ended up choosing was the cause of the choice.  Huh?  That doesn't answer anything.  It simply takes the outcome of the choice and claims that necessitated the choice.  Until the choice is made, there is no deterministic factor?  He's offering a theory of after-the-fact explanation, instead of before-the-fact necessity.  And that after-the-fact explanation is compatible with either alternative of the choice.  Whatever gets picked is described as necessitated.  There's nothing of content to argue with here, as it doesn't offer a deterministic mechanism of choosing.  It can't tell you what you'll pick, or even what factors are important, until after the fact.  After the fact, you can describe why he choose that way.  Is this really the point of the argument? 

And to add to the confusion, he now clarifies that he thinks free-will is the same as indeterminism.  This false alternative, between determinism and indeterminism, obscures the whole meaning of the free will vs. determinism debate.  It would explain why simply being able to describe, after the fact, what the reason for choosing it would seem to be enough.  It would argue against the indeterminism.  Great.  But as I said, that's not the free will position.  It's a clean kill to a straw-man, but sidesteps the real debate.

Add to this his switching between value-judgments, moral values, political values, and simply values as the necessitating cause, and you've got a recipe for never being able to even communicate, let alone agree.  For instance, in the Bidinotto example, it's one's political principles that allegedly necessitate the choice, but now it appears that act of voting for Bidinotto is the real cause of the choice.  We went from efficient cause to final cause.

I tried showing how his stated positions don't make any sense, hoping he could either dismiss them or clarify them.  But instead of achieving clarity, things are getting more obscure.  Is it sloppy language?  Or is it a fundamental lack of clarity in the first place?  I've reach the point where I can no longer assume that his position is substantial enough to understand and argue about.  Maybe others with more patience will tease out a clearer understanding.  But there's always the possibility that there is no clarity underneath the confusion and sloppy language.  Or, it may be even more simple.  Bill may be arguing against indeterminism, and so focused on it that he is missing the point of every question and statement thrown at him.


Post 53

Saturday, December 22, 2007 - 11:06pmSanction this postReply
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Joe wrote,
I'm ending my part in this discussion. I can't make heads or tails of what Bill is talking about. Specifically, right up until you make a choice there are more than one alternative [sic]. Under Bill's determinism, what is the cause that necessitates the choice of one alternative over the other? He says it's the value, that which you act to gain/keep. Whatever you ended up choosing was the cause of the choice. Huh? It simply takes the outcome of the choice and claims that necessitated the choice.
No, not the outcome of the choice; the OBJECT of the choice -- what you're SEEKING to gain or keep by choosing the action. In other words, the PURPOSE of the choice is the cause of the choice.
Until the choice is made, there is no deterministic factor? He's offering a theory of after-the-fact explanation, instead of before-the-fact necessity.
No, you don't understand the concept "that which one acts TO gain or keep." What that phrase is referring to is the GOAL of the action, not the result of the action. Remember Branden's paraphrase? -- "A value is an object of an action." In other words, one is choosing an action FOR THE SAKE of obtaining a value. One may not in fact achieve the sought after value, but it is that which one is SEEKING to achieve.
And that after-the-fact explanation is compatible with either alternative of the choice. Whatever gets picked is described as necessitated. There's nothing of content to argue with here, as it doesn't offer a deterministic mechanism of choosing. It can't tell you what you'll pick, or even what factors are important, until after the fact. After the fact, you can describe why he choose that way. Is this really the point of the argument?
If I know someone really well, I can predict some of his choices. If I know my friend loves pro-football, I can predict that he'll watch the Superbowl (barring some emergency or the supervention of a much more pressing value). Often-times, of course, I cannot know what choices someone will make, because what he is trying to achieve is decided on only at the last moment, but that doesn't mean that what he values -- what he wants to achieve -- doesn't determine his choices.
And to add to the confusion, he now clarifies that he thinks free-will is the same as indeterminism. This false alternative, between determinism and indeterminism, obscures the whole meaning of the free will vs. determinism debate. It would explain why simply being able to describe, after the fact, what the reason for choosing it would seem to be enough. It would argue against the indeterminism. Great. But as I said, that's not the free will position. It's a clean kill to a straw-man, but sidesteps the real debate.
I understand the difference between the doctrine of free-will and that of indeterminism. The doctrine of free will says that by freely choosing one's actions, one exercises causal control over them; indeterminism says that one's choices are uncaused. What I am arguing is that, despite claims to the contrary, free will implies indeterminism, because it implies that since one's choice isn't made for the sake of a goal or a value, it therefore lacks a cause. It won't do to reply that the cause is the person himself, because that reply doesn't address the question of why the person made the choice -- for the sake of what end or value? If he didn't make it for the sake of any end or value, then the choice is indetermined. A choice that isn't made for the sake of an end or value also contradicts the fact that the actions of human beings, like those of all living organisms, are goal-directed. Even if you don't agree with this view of determinism, it's important to understand my argument. I'm not saying that there is no difference between the theory of free will and the theory of indeterminism. Of course, there's a difference. I'm not equating the two theoretically. Rather I'm saying that, in the final analysis, free will implies and entails indeterminism.
Add to this his switching between value-judgments, moral values, political values, and simply values as the necessitating cause, and you've got a recipe for never being able to even communicate, let alone agree. For instance, in the Bidinotto example, it's one's political principles that allegedly necessitate the choice, but now it appears that act of voting for Bidinotto is the real cause of the choice. We went from efficient cause to final cause.
Where did I say that the act of voting is the CAUSE of the choice? The act of voting IS the choice. The cause of that choice is the voter's political values -- what he is seeking to achieve politically by casting his vote.
I tried showing how his stated positions don't make any sense, hoping he could either dismiss them or clarify them. But instead of achieving clarity, things are getting more obscure. Is it sloppy language? Or is it a fundamental lack of clarity in the first place? I've reach the point where I can no longer assume that his position is substantial enough to understand and argue about. Maybe others with more patience will tease out a clearer understanding. But there's always the possibility that there is no clarity underneath the confusion and sloppy language. Or, it may be even more simple. Bill may be arguing against indeterminism, and so focused on it that he is missing the point of every question and statement thrown at him.
I don't think so. I'm reading the responses very carefully, and am making a sincere effort to understand the criticisms and to give an honest and well reasoned reply.

- Bill
(Edited by William Dwyer on 12/23, 9:51am)

(Edited by William Dwyer on 12/23, 10:21am)


Post 54

Sunday, December 23, 2007 - 12:04pmSanction this postReply
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Joe, you shouldn't continue a discussion if you believe it's not worth it to you. But Bill has consistently and honestly answered all of your points (and those of others on this thread).

Personally, I'm not confused about he has said. He's saying that every choice is made for the sake of a particular value (i.e., the object that one is seeking to gain/keep). That value might be material (a car) or spiritual (a sense of self-esteem). Whatever it is, the value's position on your value scale determines your behavior in the face of alternatives. I tend to agree with this viewpoint.

Where I disagree with Bill is that such a belief makes someone a "determinist." In my mind, a determinist is someone who believes that an individual's actions are necessitated by some factor beyond his own control (i.e., fate, genes, rearing, etc.). Whereas I believe that because an individual's values are set by him (consciously or subconsciously) and may be changed intentionally. Thus, I'm an advocate of free will, which means the choice of an individual to think or not and set one's values according to a rational method.

Post 55

Sunday, December 23, 2007 - 2:16pmSanction this postReply
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"Whereas I believe that because an individual's values are set by him (consciously or subconsciously) and may be changed intentionally." Jon

I believe Bill goes beyond this view, to assert that those value selections are themselves determined by antecedent factors, and so on and so on, until you reach something which is outside your control (genetics, rearing, society, etc.)

At least, that is how I interpret his statements in the past on this subject.

But I agree he is being honest and not attempting to obfuscate.

Bill,

I'll address your points as soon as possible.

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Post 56

Sunday, December 23, 2007 - 2:33pmSanction this postReply
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Bill and Jon, I don't want to imply that Bill is being dishonest.  I just think that he's consistently missing the point of my arguments, possibly because he thinks I'm arguing for some variant of indeterminism.

Let me offer one last example.  Take Bill's friend who wants to watch the Superbowl.  But imagine he stayed up all night the night before, and is exhausted.  While in theory he can choose between countless options, in this example we'll say he narrows it down to watching the Superbowl and taking a nap.

If he chooses the Superbowl, then after the fact you can say he made the choice to achieve the value of entertainment.  If he chooses the nap, then after the fact you can say he made the choice to achieve the value of rest.  In both cases, you can "explain" his action by reference to the value that he sought after.

But the issue, in terms of offering this as a necessitated or deterministic choice, is to look before the choice was made.  At that point, there are at least two values in play, not one.  You can't focus on the value he picked and say that it made the decision for him.  You can say that was the motive for wanting to pursue that particular action, but it wasn't the criteria for picking between the two values.  In other words, it only explains the action taken and why he wanted to pursue that action in the first place, but it doesn't explain the choice.  It doesn't explain why the other option wasn't chosen.

Nor is it enough to simply say "he valued X more than Y".  That again only describes the outcome of the decision making process.  It simply says that after he made the choice, he went with X instead of Y.  Until the choice was made, this can be answered in the same way.  If "value" is that which you end up seeking, then until the choice is made, neither is really a value.

Instead, you'd have to phrase it different.  You could say for instance that he physically wanted sleep.  You could say that he had a long term goal of watching the game.  You could say that emotionally, he wants to watch the game live, but intellectually, he knows it'll be the same even if he naps first and watches it later on Tivo.  But until the choice is made, you can't say that he prefers one over the other.  You can say based on different standards he may prefer one to the other.  On the standard of good health, he may favor the sleep.  But he still must decide which of these standards he prefers.

At the beginning of the process of evaluation, he may prefer one to the other.  As he works through the issues, he may decide that part of that was based on a faulty evaluation.  He may, for instance, realize that the pleasure he'd get watching the game would be limited because he's so tired, whereas that didn't occur to him.  He may decide to weigh these options based on his best understanding of life as the standard of value, or he may instead take a shortcut and go with whichever one feels good.  This process could take seconds, or minutes.  The outcome will be based on how hard he focuses, how details an analysis he takes, and whether anything happens to distract him at the time.

Or imagine he flips a coin.  If the coin says to watch the Superbowl, he didn't decide to watch the game because he valued the entertainment higher.  He made the choice because it was very close to the value of sleep, and in fact the coin made the decision for him.  After the fact, you can say that on net, he preferred the Superbowl (including the random result of the coin toss).  But it's an after the fact description.  You certainly couldn't know that before the decision was made.  And certainly the primary reason for wanting to watch the Superbowl, the entertainment value, was not the primary reason for making the choice the way he did.

So there's a difference between why did he want to pursue an action, and why did he choose that action.  Saying that he valued it higher is a description of the results, not an indicator of what necessitated the choice.  And of course, Bill has claimed that the value actually did necessitate the choice.

I think this is the best I can do in describing it all.  Given that previous attempts have failed, I'm not optimistic.  But if anyone cares to understand why I think Bill hasn't actually been answering my questions or dealing with the issues I brought up, this post explains it.  There has to be a real effort at distinguishing before the choice is made and after.  If you're going to describe how a choice is made, it's not proper to use the result of that choice, let alone say that it necessitated the choice.  Before the choice is made, the decision-maker doesn't have that information available. 


Post 57

Sunday, December 23, 2007 - 4:07pmSanction this postReply
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Joe, good illumination ...

Nor is it enough to simply say "he valued X more than Y".  That again only describes the outcome of the decision making process.  It simply says that after he made the choice, he went with X instead of Y.  Until the choice was made, this can be answered in the same way.  If "value" is that which you end up seeking, then until the choice is made, neither is really a value.
Right. Bill says that it's an act that defines a value (the act of gaining or keeping). On this definition, whenever there aren't acts -- there aren't values -- even if your immediate value is to sit still (as when you're hiding from a close-by predator). Because values -- according to Bill -- are always and only things that you act for; inaction indicates no values.[!]


 
Instead, you'd have to phrase it different.  You could say for instance that he physically wanted sleep.  You could say that he had a long term goal of watching the game.  You could say that emotionally, he wants to watch the game live, but intellectually, he knows it'll be the same even if he naps first and watches it later on Tivo.  But until the choice is made, you can't say that he prefers one over the other.  You can say based on different standards he may prefer one to the other.  On the standard of good health, he may favor the sleep.  But he still must decide which of these standards he prefers.
This is what I touched on in post 42 (that you don't have to physically act, to value).

 
At the beginning of the process of evaluation, he may prefer one to the other.  As he works through the issues, he may decide that part of that was based on a faulty evaluation.  He may, for instance, realize that the pleasure he'd get watching the game would be limited because he's so tired, whereas that didn't occur to him.  He may decide to weigh these options based on his best understanding of life as the standard of value, or he may instead take a shortcut and go with whichever one feels good.  This process could take seconds, or minutes.  The outcome will be based on how hard he focuses, how details an analysis he takes, and whether anything happens to distract him at the time.
This is what I touched on in post 41 (that you have to have a privileged access into the workings of another's mind - in order for "value-determinism" to bear good "fruit"). Otherwise, we should judge value-determinism by the fruit it DOES bear -- which unfortunately isn't very good fruit (compared to alternatives).

 
Or imagine he flips a coin.  If the coin says to watch the Superbowl, he didn't decide to watch the game because he valued the entertainment higher.  He made the choice because it was very close to the value of sleep, and in fact the coin made the decision for him.  After the fact, you can say that on net, he preferred the Superbowl (including the random result of the coin toss).  But it's an after the fact description.  You certainly couldn't know that before the decision was made.  And certainly the primary reason for wanting to watch the Superbowl, the entertainment value, was not the primary reason for making the choice the way he did.
Another post 41-related point.

So there's a difference between why did he want to pursue an action, and why did he choose that action.  Saying that he valued it higher is a description of the results, not an indicator of what necessitated the choice.  And of course, Bill has claimed that the value actually did necessitate the choice.
Good point, Joe.


I think this is the best I can do in describing it all.  Given that previous attempts have failed, I'm not optimistic.  But if anyone cares to understand why I think Bill hasn't actually been answering my questions or dealing with the issues I brought up, this post explains it.  There has to be a real effort at distinguishing before the choice is made and after.  If you're going to describe how a choice is made, it's not proper to use the result of that choice, let alone say that it necessitated the choice.  Before the choice is made, the decision-maker doesn't have that information available.

This point relates to both post 41 and 42.

Ed


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Post 58

Sunday, December 23, 2007 - 5:57pmSanction this postReply
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Joe Rowlands wrote:
There has to be a real effort at distinguishing before the choice is made and after.  If you're going to describe how a choice is made, it's not proper to use the result of that choice, let alone say that it necessitated the choice.  Before the choice is made, the decision-maker doesn't have that information available.
I made that effort about 2.5 years ago here.  It didn't get a response then. I raised it again about two years ago here, and Bissell and Bill Dwyer both responded. To me it's important to distinguish between (a) when a person recognizes there is a choice to be made and (b) when the person makes the choice. Clearly what happens between these  times is important for capturing the nature of volition.


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Post 59

Sunday, December 23, 2007 - 8:23pmSanction this postReply
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Thanks, Merlin.

Interested onlookers, I invite you to read through (from beginning to end) the 2 hyper-links that Merlin marshaled in post 58. The perspective they might provide you may be, on some level, invaluable.

Ed


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