Some Thoughts On Free Will
I recently read Annaka Harris's "Conscious" and her husband Sam's "Free Will." Both were enjoyable reads, but their views on (our lack of) free will differ from my own, but rather than a deep dive on the topic I'd like to contest a key point they raise. Their cases against free will rest in part on neuroscience. In my view this is a category error. The reason is that modern science generally--and the Ben Libet experiments which both Sam and Annaka refer to specifically--rests on the assumption that things (the will, in Libet's case) can be explained in terms of what classical philosophers called "efficient" and "material" causes, while ignoring "formal" and "final" causes. The problem is, this is like trying to explain a poem by studying the ink (material cause) and the cause of its coming to be (efficient cause), but leaving out its meaning (formal cause) and why it was written (final cause). Of course, mater...