Imagine you are in a spaceship. You have a main thruster and two pairs of 
opposed lateral thrusters. All thrusters have limited fuel supplies, preventing 
perpetual use. Other than that, you may activate any thruster, alone or in 
combination for any duration up to the limit of the fuel supply.

Call the ability to push buttons and fire thrusters at whim, with deliberation, 
accidentally, with intent, etc. "free will"with regard that/those act(s).

Recognize that the outcome/consequence of your acts of freewill — i.e. a ship 
trajectory — is determined by the attitude, vector, momentum (embodied history 
or previous free will actions), and the gravitational influence of every other 
mass in the Universe. (Even if the influence is below a threshold of reasonable 
measurement,)

Further recognize,  that for the outcome/consequence of your acts of freewill 
to have "meaning" — i.e. to ensure your arrival at Star Base Theta in the 
Altairian Sector — you need a comprehensive knowledge and understanding of 
celestial dynamics in order to take the right actions in the right degree at 
the right time.

Now imagine yourself a homunculus sitting in a hidden recess of your 
cerebellum, surrounded by a 767's worth of buttons, switches, instruments, 
dials, and computer interfaces. You still have a "fuel constraint' but the 
degrees of freedom and the combinatorial explosion of possible acts/actions is 
immense.

Call the ability to push buttons, flip switches, input computer commands, etc.; 
at whim, with deliberation, accidentally, with intent, etc. "free will" with 
regard that/those act(s).

Recognize that the outcome/consequences of your acts of freewill — i.e. a "life 
trajectory" is determined by your state at the time of acting,  the embodied 
history of all previous acts, and the influence of all other entities (sentient 
or not, measurable or not) in your environment.

Further recognize that for your life trajectory to have "meaning" — i.e. 
whatever set of states and circumstances that fit your idiosyncratic definition 
of 'the good life' — you need self-knowledge that exceeds even Socrates' ideal, 
awareness and understanding of culture, and probably comprehensive and 
intuitive understanding of Harry Seldon's Psychohistory.

* * * * * * * * * * * 
Can useful questions, positions, conclusions be derived?

davew


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