Hi Steve --

On Monday, 6/13/11, 10:02 AM "Steven Peterson" <peterson.st...@gmail.com>
wrote:


Hi Ham,

Ham:
Free will is the power to choose. It is unintelligible only for
determinists who believe that human actions, like all
evolutionary events, are the consequence of prior causes.
This would be true if human beings were controlled by their
"beingness", enslaved by their genetic propensities and
biological instincts, or programmed by a moral universe.

Statistical conglomerates pay tribute to deterministic forces.
But this is not the case for singularities such as human beings
who possess a unique, highly developed, and sensitive
perception of diversity. This affords man the unique capability
for enacting his intentions, which is the basis of his active
intelligence and which, as James Fletcher Baxter says,
makes man "Earth's Choicemaker."

Steve:
Do you see this "power to choose" as the possession of man
but not other animals?

Yes I do, Steve. I suppose a case can be made for "intentional behavior" on the part of highly developed cerebrates. However, my personal view is that animal "preferences" are largely determined by instinct, which supports Nature's law of survival. Man shares this biological guidance system with the animal species of course; but his major decisions, creative works, and socio-cultural agendas are often based on choices that override or run counter to natural law. One can cite the invention of "lighter than air" craft, central plumbing, or electric power generation as examples.

I believe what drives mankind is not instinct but aesthetic and intellectual values of which the animal species are oblivious. The soldier in battle who sacrifices his life for his country is certainly not acting in accordance with nature's laws. The ideas laid out in the Magna Carta and the Declaration of Independence are based on moral principles rationalized from man's value sensibility. Da Vinci's "Mona Lisa' and Beethoven's 'Ode to Joy' express values that can be appreciated only by aesthetically sensible human beings.

I also believe the "power to choose" has an intellectual corollary -- namely, knowing that one is capable of self-determination. Children start out in life indulging their natural appetites; if they mature normally, they acquire the intelligence to base their choices on more rational values like personal responsibility, justice, and concern for others. This is what has enabled mankind to establish the moral systems needed for peaceful co-existence and free enterprise. The moral precept here is rational, self-directed value, and it can only function where individuals realize they are, to borrow
Milton Friedman's axiom, Free to Choose.

Essentially speaking,
Ham


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