Kip Werking, I can see where you’re coming from, but “free will” isn’t just some attempt to escape fatalism. Look at Eliezer’s post: something we recognize as “free will” appears whenever we undergo introspection, for example. Or look at legal cases: acts are prosecuted entirely differently if they are not done of one’s “free will”, contracts are annulled if the signatories did not sign of their own “free will”. We praise good deeds and deplore evil deeds that are done of one’s own “free will”. Annihilation of free will requires rebuilding all of these again from their very foundations—why do so, then, when one may be confident that a reasonable reading of the term exists?
Kip Werking, I can see where you’re coming from, but “free will” isn’t just some attempt to escape fatalism. Look at Eliezer’s post: something we recognize as “free will” appears whenever we undergo introspection, for example. Or look at legal cases: acts are prosecuted entirely differently if they are not done of one’s “free will”, contracts are annulled if the signatories did not sign of their own “free will”. We praise good deeds and deplore evil deeds that are done of one’s own “free will”. Annihilation of free will requires rebuilding all of these again from their very foundations—why do so, then, when one may be confident that a reasonable reading of the term exists?