Determinism is the outside view; free will is what it feels like from the inside. Right now I’m typing this comment, and it certainly feels to me like I am deciding what to say, i.e., I feel I have free will. Taking the outside view, what I’m writing has been inevitable since the Big Bang, i.e., it has been determined.
Oh, sorry! I misread your question. You’re asking if I think free will is an illusion. I guess you could say that yes, I think it doesn’t really exist, because we make decisions and take actions because of our thoughts and feelings, which are ultimately ‘just’ processes within our brains, which are subject to the laws of physics. Like I said, from the moment of the Big Bang it has been inevitable that I would come to write this comment. It’s mind-boggling, really. Also mind-boggling is the amount of time I’ve already spent writing and thinking about and rewriting (and rere[...]rewriting this comment, that’s why it is so late.
Determinism is the outside view; free will is what it feels like from the inside. Right now I’m typing this comment, and it certainly feels to me like I am deciding what to say, i.e., I feel I have free will. Taking the outside view, what I’m writing has been inevitable since the Big Bang, i.e., it has been determined.
That’s not quite an answer to my question.
Oh, sorry! I misread your question. You’re asking if I think free will is an illusion. I guess you could say that yes, I think it doesn’t really exist, because we make decisions and take actions because of our thoughts and feelings, which are ultimately ‘just’ processes within our brains, which are subject to the laws of physics. Like I said, from the moment of the Big Bang it has been inevitable that I would come to write this comment. It’s mind-boggling, really. Also mind-boggling is the amount of time I’ve already spent writing and thinking about and rewriting (and rere[...]rewriting this comment, that’s why it is so late.