[Case] 
> there are a variety of factors that can influence my "free will" and 
> the more of them I consider the less free my will seems. 

Or is it the other way?  When I have no reason to eat a bowl of worms, I feel 
compelled to shun them.  But when I'm offered money, fame & a chance to return 
to the reality TV program for another week, I weigh the pros & cons.  In this 
latter case it feels that I am exercising my free will: I could decide either 
way.   
An adult sucks his thumb.  A Freudian says it's because he has an unconscious 
desire to be nursed by his mother again.  What is the evidence for this?  He 
sucks his thumb.
Normally, the taste of worms causes me to shun them.  But when offered money, 
etc. to do so, I eat the worms. Why?  "Because the force causing me to shun the 
worms is weaker than the force of wanting money."  But what if instead I decide 
to eat the worms.  "Then the former force wasn't weaker."  How do we know that? 
 
Craig
   
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