Your comments seem like they answer a slightly different question: “What would it feel for a person who has free will to not have free will?”. The right question is, “What would it feel for a person who doesn’t have free will to not have free will?”. (brushing all concerns about what ‘free will’ is under the carpet for now)
I don’t mean either of those. You may have a feeling of having or not having free will regardless of what some future agreed upon definition of free will might turn out to be. I’m asking what (their own) subjective experiences would people classify as “feeling of not having free will”. TheOtherDave linked to his personal experience, which seems to match at least one on my list. I make no assertions of whether he does or does not actually have free will, and neither does he. In fact, I don’t believe that a reasonable definition of free will can be made without people first agreeing on the answers to the question I asked.
Your comments seem like they answer a slightly different question: “What would it feel for a person who has free will to not have free will?”. The right question is, “What would it feel for a person who doesn’t have free will to not have free will?”. (brushing all concerns about what ‘free will’ is under the carpet for now)
I don’t mean either of those. You may have a feeling of having or not having free will regardless of what some future agreed upon definition of free will might turn out to be. I’m asking what (their own) subjective experiences would people classify as “feeling of not having free will”. TheOtherDave linked to his personal experience, which seems to match at least one on my list. I make no assertions of whether he does or does not actually have free will, and neither does he. In fact, I don’t believe that a reasonable definition of free will can be made without people first agreeing on the answers to the question I asked.