a. y. mous, in my estimation you’re on surest ground describing free will as an “experience”. Given all the ways we’ve already discovered that the experience seems to be illusory, it seems to me to be quite likely that free will is in every way illusory. You also use the word “enjoying”, which I like. I consider the enjoyment of a free will experience to be a luxury to indulge in to the the degree that it maximizes my persistence odds (given how unfriendly reality seems to be to my long-term persistence). Beyond that, scientific inquiry into the free-will experience does seem to be important to me, because it seems such a fundamental element of the general human subjective conscious experience. It would be wisely conservative, in my opinion, to place priority on preserving that part of the bundle of human subjective conscious experience as we seek various solutions to the mortality challenges we face.
a. y. mous, in my estimation you’re on surest ground describing free will as an “experience”. Given all the ways we’ve already discovered that the experience seems to be illusory, it seems to me to be quite likely that free will is in every way illusory. You also use the word “enjoying”, which I like. I consider the enjoyment of a free will experience to be a luxury to indulge in to the the degree that it maximizes my persistence odds (given how unfriendly reality seems to be to my long-term persistence). Beyond that, scientific inquiry into the free-will experience does seem to be important to me, because it seems such a fundamental element of the general human subjective conscious experience. It would be wisely conservative, in my opinion, to place priority on preserving that part of the bundle of human subjective conscious experience as we seek various solutions to the mortality challenges we face.