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Does free will exist?
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Ruth
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Aug 18, 2013 02:50PM

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I do believe in free will. The problem is what we do is being governed. We could do something that we see is in our free will that is frowned upon by another (usually a position of power) that will decide whether our actions are good or bad and whether they need punishment or rewarding.

How do you decide if someone or something has free will? Do you think non-human animals also have free will? What about plants?


H99 wrote: "Evan wrote: "I think animals do have free will. However they have a more naturalistic vibe within themselves that means they act the way they do."
They have free will unless they're captured by us..."
So do choanoflagellates (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choanofl...) have free will? Also, do we lose our free will if we're imprisoned or unconscious?

Very very few people have free will- the power to override all norms ad conventions they know and choose based only on instinct.
Education in itself would destroy free will because knowledge is inherently biased and is sure to change your behavior
Is it bad? Probably not. But we are ALL a product of life and learning.
Education in itself would destroy free will because knowledge is inherently biased and is sure to change your behavior
Is it bad? Probably not. But we are ALL a product of life and learning.




Okay, let's try this again:
Does free will exist? Do we have the freedom to choose who we are? Or are we dictated by other circumstances? WHY?"
^^^What Xdjy said....(and very well said!)
Xdyj wrote: "Personally I think "free will", like "self" or "individuality", do exist, but only as a social construct. In other words, the concept of "free will" per se without a social/cultural context is mean..."
My thoughts exactly!
My thoughts exactly!