Oh this Spinoza biography looks like an interesting book. If I would have a 
time machine, then Darwin, Pascal and Spinoza would be on the list of persons I 
would like to visit, although I do not understand French. Gauss, Goethe, 
Humboldt and Leibniz too.Who would be on your list? George Washington or 
Abraham Lincoln? Herman Melville or William James?-J.
-------- Original message --------From: Merle Lefkoff <[email protected]> 
Date: 2/28/21  18:46  (GMT+01:00) To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity 
Coffee Group <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Subjective experience & 
free will Baruch ("blessed in Hebrew) de Spinoza was born in Amsterdam in 1632. 
 His grandfather, Abraham, was a refugee from the Inquisition in Portugal.  My 
mother helped edit a biography of Spinoza written by Abraham Wolfson, published 
in 1932 by Modern Classics Publishers.  (I have a copy dedicated to my mom.) A 
facsimile reprint came out in 2007, published by Kessinger Publishers, because 
"this scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original.  Due to 
its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and 
flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have 
made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and 
promoting the world's literature..."Chapter XIII is especially interesting to 
me and begins with a quote from Goethe:  "Truth is a torch, but a terrible 
one...The natural instinct is to give a sideglance, lest, looking it fairly in 
the face, the strong glare might blind us."On Sun, Feb 28, 2021 at 7:08 AM 
Frank Wimberly <[email protected]> wrote:I think Spaniards think Spinoza was 
a Spanish Jew (Espinoza).  I realize this could probably be resolved to my 
satisfaction by Wikipedia.---Frank C. Wimberly140 Calle Ojo Feliz, Santa Fe, NM 
87505505 670-9918Santa Fe, NMOn Sun, Feb 28, 2021, 6:50 AM Jochen Fromm 
<[email protected]> wrote:Spinoza, a Dutch contemporary of Leibniz, argued as 
well in his book "Ethics" that it is the lack of knowledge & awareness that 
helps to create the illusion of freedom:"Experience teaches us no less clearly 
than reason, that men believe themselves free, simply because they are 
conscious of their actions, and unconscious of the causes whereby those actions 
are determined".What I like about these 400 year old philosophers is that they 
have tackled the really big questions. And they worked interdisciplinary, 
because fields like psychology or physics have not been invented 
yet.-J.-------- Original message --------From: Eric Charles 
<[email protected]> Date: 2/28/21  06:05  (GMT+01:00) To: The 
Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]> Subject: Re: 
[FRIAM] Subjective experience & free will Skinner had the book "Beyond Freedom 
and Dignity" (1971) that made a similar argument. Basically, he argued that 
while we didn't have full explanations of behavior yet, we had made enough 
progress to be confident that behavior could be explained in various ways - 
development, immediate causation, etc. - in all situations. If we can agree on 
that, or even mostly-agree on that, what happens to concepts like "freedom", 
which seem to be applied primarily in situations where we can't obviously 
explain someone's behavior? When I train a rat to press a lever when the light 
in the cage illuminates, is the rat free? If your life has trained you to put 
on your right sock first, then the left, are you free? Etc., etc. And certainly 
sometimes people feel as if their choices are more "free" or less "free", but 
what do we do with that? Presumably we can also train people to generally feel 
free or not, under ostensibly identical current circumstances? (Note how many 
conversations about White Privilege, or Wealth Inequality, focus on how people 
who were given great benefits early in life often feel as if they were 
independently successful based on initiative and merit.) The issue of variation 
in feeling "free" under ostensibly similar circumstances, is a huge dilemma for 
me, as I don't feel social pressures in many situations where others do. "I 
wasn't free to talk in the meeting", someone says. And I look confused, because 
so far as I could tell they were clearly free to talk in the meeting, but chose 
not to for various reasons. "You don't understand how hard it is to X, under 
circumstances Y!" Well... I do understand why it might feel hard... but that 
sounds like an explanation for why you chose not to. We aren't talking about 
how hard it is to run a sub-6-minute mile, or sing an Opera, we are talking 
about how it can feel hard to call someone out for a racist comment in the 
middle of a meeting (or something like that). In fact, I often have people come 
to me before key meetings and ask me to bring up points they don't feel free to 
bring up. Am I "free" because I find that relatively easy? Are they "not free" 
because they find it hard? Does it matter that, as Jochen points out, one could 
certainly look into my and the other person's past, or into my and the other 
person's physiology, and construct an explanation for why each of us 
behave-in-meetings the way we do now? Or is it, as Skinner suggested, time to 
just move "beyond" such questions? On Sat, Feb 27, 2021 at 4:29 PM Jochen Fromm 
<[email protected]> wrote:I am reading a book about Leibniz and started to 
wonder if the hard problem of consciousness could be the reason why we have the 
illusion of free will and can not predict how others will act. From the outside 
a person seems to have free will in principle. From the inside everybody feels 
something different and is controlled by emotions based on subjective 
experience, which is unknown to others, because the individual is not 
transparent and the history is not known.Once we investigate the life of a 
person, for example by a detective as part of a criminal investigation, or as 
movie viewers in a cinema, we start to understand why a person acts they way it 
does. The more we step into the footsteps of a person, the better we understand 
the feelings, goals and motives.Could it be that the same thing which  prevents 
us from understanding the subjective experiences of others also creates the 
illusion of free will?-J.- .... . -..-. . -. -.. -..-. .. ... -..-. .... . .-. .
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-- Merle Lefkoff, Ph.D.Center for Emergent Diplomacyemergentdiplomacy.orgSanta 
Fe, New Mexico, USAmobile:  (303) 859-5609skype:  merle.lelfkoff2twitter: 
@merle110
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