Ok say you are building a robot. A very sophisticated robot. Its hardware can be compared in its complexity to the human brain and nervous system. Drop a book on its toe and a bunch of wires and replica neurons get busy, but you are not sure your robot feels/has subjective experience...
I think we're drifting into the territory of Strong AI, the topic on which I had a long
thread with Harvey. We should probably move the robot-vs.-man discussion there, but let me summarize:
With your argument from subjective experience, you can only prove that
you, personally, have subjective experiences and thus free will. You cannot prove that I, Bugmaster, have them. You could say, "well, Bugmaster behaves as though he has these experiences so he probably does", but then, I'm no different to you than a really sophisticated robot. So, your choice is to treat anything that acts human as human (including possible robots), or to treat everyone as a robot and hide under your bed (someone actually suggested that, believe it or not), or to use some other criterion to decide (but I don't know what it might be).
To put it more succinctly, I think your argument leads to a sort of solipsism, which is philosophically problematic.
Ok. But wave A + wave B = resulting wave C. Thus A + B are the cause of C. These kinds of interactions are very deterministic.
But this is not how waves work, especially not on the quantum level :-( They exist in all possible states most of the time.
Well certainly random. Caused or uncaused? Hmmm. Well when I say experience is not caused, I also mean explanations relying on randomness cannot explain it.
Ok, let's say we have two lightbulbs, that can turn on or off. Each lightbulb is connected to a machine that turns it on and off, off and on, etc. One of the machines uses a random process to toggle the lightbulb, and the other one is using an uncaused process, but we don't know which one is which.
How could we tell which machine is random and which is uncaused, if we may only look at the light bulbs ? And if we can't tell, in principle, then why does it matter ?
But my point about experience as experienced is that this does not have prior conditions. So subjective experience is not explainable by prior conditions.
Why not ? I can grant you that we currently do not know the mechanism by which subjective experiences operate (especially, subjective experiences other than yourself), but that doesn't mean that we
can't know that mechanism, in principle.
The nearest physical example I can think of are virtual particles popping into and out of existence from nothing. As long as science does not discover/require some prior conditions to this phenomena then I'd say they could meet my criteria of uncaused.
But there are quite good reasons to believe that
virtual particles exist, and what causes them. Just as radioactive decay, they're random, but I wouldn't call them entirely arbitrary. Inicidently, IIRC, the X-Ray radiation emitted by black holes is caused by virtual particles.
It that right? There is the causal chain event between the two free wills. The chains just do not trace back further.
Ok, let's try and trace it:
A. Bugmaster's free will causes him to post something.
B. Bugmaster enters a post.
C. FB reads the post.
D. FB's free will causes him to post something.
E. DB enters a post.
F. Bugmaster reads a post
g. (goto A)
A causes B, B causes C, but nothing can cause D or A, since by definition free will is uncaused. So, there's no causal chain between A and D. We have two separate chains (A->B->C, D->E->F) that are not connected.
I detect some frustration with me Bugmaster. I can understand that.
Nah, this is how I always talk :-)