I've been developing a very coherent philosophy for the past couple years, and then a bit of logic led me a certain way, and then woops, I lost free will.
My immediate reaction is that you're putting the cart before the horse.
Your logic does not coincide with your experience and rather than using logic to explain your real experience, you are trying to re-interpret experience to fit in with your logic.
And if you happen to already believe in ...
See? Seems like you already believe in your logic, and your logic does not agree with your experience. So rather than re-evaluating the logic, you seem to be assuming that it is your experience which is mistaken.
And my definition of the universe probably isn't quite the same as everyone else's.
I apreciate that it would take some effort, but could you please have a shot at putting it into words? Doesn't matter if it's incomplete. At the moment I can't see where you're coming from and I'd really like to have at least a vague idea of where you're trying to get to.
You are right that we cannot test free will in any fashion. And because we cannot test it, we cannot assume it to be true.
Nope. I can test it every time I get a paycheque, every time I choose to get out of bed in the morning. I make choices and put them into action.
The experience of acting with free choice is quite ubiquitous. It doesn't take complicated theories to explain. To say I have no such free choice seems to require all sorts of complex theorising. I quite agree that it might just be one big illusion, but it does generally tally with experience.
What fundamental insight led you to question free will?
What experience have you had which suggests to you that free will does not exist?
Where do you find examples of the non-existence of free will? Addiction might be one place to start, but even then, addiction is generally interprated as a condition in which free will exists albeit in a compromised state.
What fundamental insight led you to question free will?
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