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Sofia Jeppsson's avatar

I wrote my doctoral dissertation on free will. I published mostly on free will and moral responsibility in the more abstract sense before going into psych stuff. I still teach free will. But I don't understand what this part means:

"Free will is a problematic notion for me for the purposes of adjudication and prevention of problem behaviors. I alluded to these in my prior essay for your ‘five ideas’ program. In short, I think that existing philosophical theories about free will are deficient in that I reject a common theme through all of them, namely, the concept of determinism, whether ‘strong’ or ‘weak’. The problem is that determinism marginalizes, or overlooks completely, the ever-present effects of entropy or randomness, which undermine deterministic accounts."

Maybe there's some mix-up here between how philosophers use the term "determinism" and how it may be used outside of our field?

Carl Hoefer defines determinism as follows at the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy:

"Determinism: Determinism is true of the world if and only if, given a specified way things are at a time t, the way things go thereafter is fixed as a matter of natural law."

We don't know if the world is deterministic in this sense. Arguably, quantum mechanics suggests that it's not. But it MIGHT be deterministic in this sense and yet, quite often, impossible to predict for mere mortals. The weather may be too chaotic to ever predict, human behaviour may be too complicated to ever predict, the behaviour of elementary particles may be impossible to predict even if they ultimately obey some deep deterministic laws that we don't know about, etc. All of this could be true even if the universe is ultimately deterministic.

Philosophers discuss what, if anything, follows if the world is deterministic, but few people would say with any confidence that it IS (you have an easier time finding free will philosophers who say with any confidence that it's probably NOT).

But, John and Awais, if you wanna read up on free will, moral responsibility and retributivism, COME TO ME! I have the papers!

I've argued that debates about free will and moral responsibility will likely go on forever in philosophy, because you've got several camps whose theories are compatible with our best science but differ in which intuitions they rely on. Most likely, people's intuitions are just different, and will never homogenize, so we'll always have these different camps.

But that in itself is a reason not to have a retributivist criminal justice system. It's as illiberal to base a societal institution on controversial philosophical theories, built on intuitions that not everyone shares, as it would be to base it on some religion that not everyone shares. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12152-020-09436-6

Here, I defend my own brand of compatibilism: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11098-019-01292-2 I believe I'm right and philosophers who disagree with me are wrong. But I would never stake someone's life or liberty on that claim!

And here's a madness/psych-oriented paper about moral responsibility, where I discuss how it's unfeasible AND undesirable to try to replace what you call "folk-psychology" here completely with causal explanations of behaviour. https://imsj.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/imsj/article/view/5243

Here, I argue that it's often better to focus on external obstacles that people face than either brain dysfunctions or philosophical free will scepticism if you want to excuse them: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/phis.12243

This isn't all, of course! I've got tons! You wanna learn more about free will and moral responsibility and how to fit them within a scientific worldview, I've got your backs!

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JZS's avatar

Sofia, thanks for your very thoughtful and detailed comment. Awais has it right when he notes that my general account and conclusions in VAPD2 don't depend on a particular account of free will (or complex causality), so my offhand, unelaborated, and incomplete discussion of free will in the interview should be taken with a 'grain of salt'. A paper on free will would be a nice thing to do in the future, and at that time I'll definitely reach out to you to compare notes and read more of your work.

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