Whether it's 1st or 3rd person is irrelevant. As you should know by now, I 
subscribe to "reflectivity", the ability to treat oneself as you treat others 
and vice versa. I still haven't read "The Myth of Mirror Neurons". But I do 
believe we learn mostly through mimicry, by simulating the actions of others.

The phenomenon we're after is whatever the *thing* is we mean when we say "I'll 
go to the store tomorrow", as if you have any control over whether or not 
you'll actually go to the store tomorrow. It's a promise [†] based on some 
*thing*. It's that *thing* that I intend to simulate. If you deny that thing 
exists, then you're lying, full stop. Everyone acts/talks as if they have free 
will. And it's that acting/talking *as if* you have free will that is the 
target phenomenon.


[†] To shunt anticipated word-play, if someone is very fastidious, they may 
only ever say things like "I *might* go to the store tomorrow", allowing 
ambiguity in the agency. It's agnostic as to whether the cause/choice to go the 
store is within the person or elsewhere. But that's just word-play. The idea 
that you have any idea whatsoever whether you'll go to the store tomorrow 
speaks of an in-person agency. The only actually agnostic statement is "I have 
been to the store in the past for some unknown reason." And very few sane 
people talk that way.

On 6/18/20 7:52 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> I think we have yet to agree on the phenomenon that we are explaining.  Is it 
> a first person phenomenon or a third person one?

-- 
☣ uǝlƃ

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