Hi Dan, all,

>>> dmb says:
>>> I just don't understand how your mind works. It's simple, Steve. Free will 
>>> is just another way to say that you could have acted differently. Free will 
>>> is, as my dictionary puts it, "the ability to act one's own discretion". As 
>>> I have already said many times, that is all I mean by free will. Every 
>>> dictionary and encyclopedia backs this claim and I don't see any reason why 
>>> the MOQ would defy the english language. Unlike yourself.
>
> Dan:
> Yes, I would say that free will and "could have acted differently" are
> both static quality illusions in the MOQ. Once we act, there's no
> going back. Could have beens and would have beens are regrets, nothing
> more. Yesterday is gone. And it ain't coming back...


Steve:
I'm confused. You say, "yes," as though you were agreeing with dmb
here, but what follows is clear disagreement with dmb. dmb says that
the MOQ supports the notion of free will and that free will simply
means "could have acted differently." I agree with dmb that that is
what free will means, but based on what you have said (in agreement
with me, and I think Horse, and Arlo) you _dis_agree with dmb that the
MOQ supports such a notion and requires it to support moral
responsibility. I think we both see Pirsig's notion of freedom as the
extent to which we perceive DQ as something very different from the
traditional notion of free will as "could have acted differently." dmb
is trying to slip free will as "could have acted differently" in the
back door of the MOQ.




>> Steve:
...
>> What I think would help me most would be to understand what the past
>> conditional "could" refers to in this context. "Could" if only _what_
>> were true? I've asked a couple times, but for some reason, dmb doesn't
>> think "could have acted differently" needs any explication. For me
>> there is a clear dependence on some conditional, some "if only,"
>> inherent in the word "could." I just can't make sense of "could have
>> acted differently" without a "could if _what_ were true?"
>
> Dan:
> You seem to be asking if there is some way of going back for a re-do.
> There isn't.

Steve:
I don't think there is either. So I am still wondering what dmb means
by "could" when he asserts (incorrectly I think) that the MOQ defends
a "could have acted differently notion of free will. I see Pirsig as
rejecting both free will and determinism in favor of a very different
conception of freedom from "could have acted differently."

Best,
Steve
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