MFs

Some more about will:

To will is assumed to be a special act, or operation, �in the mind�, means of which a 
mind gets its ideas translated into action. Say, for example, I pull the trigger on a 
gun. This can only happen because first there is a mental act of willing to pull the 
trigger.  (Or you could say a mental act of choosing to pull the trigger.) That�s free 
will. I, with my mind, freely will my finger to pull the trigger.

The problem with this is that there are two actions in the paragraph above. �

1.      My mind willing my finger to pull the trigger.

2.      My finger pulling the trigger.

And that raises questions about volition itself. Is the first act, my mental act of 
will, a voluntary or involuntary act of mind? Whether you answer yes or no it leads to 
absurdities. If I cannot help willing to pull the trigger, it would be absurd to 
describe my pulling it as �voluntary�. But if my will, or choice, to pull the trigger 
is voluntary then it must arise from a prior volition.

ie.
-1. My mind willing my mind to will my finger to pull the trigger.

And that must also arise from a prior volition.

ie.
-2 . My mind willing my mind to will my mind to will my mind to will my finger to pull 
the trigger.

And so on ad infinitum.

The idea that our minds, (or intellectual/social patterns) initiate actions (or make 
choices) is always going to end up in this pattern of eternal regression. It�s an 
objection to the Cartesian mind-body split put forward back in the 1940s by Oxford 
metaphysician Gilbert Ryle in �The Concept of Mind�. I really recommend anyone whose 
interested in these things to get hold of it to
read the full arguments.


Diana



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