
Originally Posted by
Random
I feel like Freedom is a legitimate Logos in its own right, honestly. I can't comment much further because, much to the frustration of anyone I talk philosophy with, I've never found a concept of free will that both makes sense and also satisfies someone who actually gets it, so I don't understand it very well. But maybe my confusion can inspire some kind of take at least, so here's what I've got:
Free will, conceptually, is opposed to the idea that all of our decisions are determined on our behalf by surrounding circumstances. If they are entirely informed by those circumstances, then there is nothing "free" about it - we are compelled to make a decision entirely because of our memories and because of what's happening right now. No part of it would be under our control. This is similar to the idea of the philosophical zombie.
However, if there is a part of our decision-making that is entirely apart from material circumstances, and thus gives us more than one option, then that extra input must not be based on the outside world at all. It is not informed by anything we experience or remember right now, nor can it be affected by our logic (i.e. our thoughts and considerations based on the information that matters). Because it's based on nothing, it is essentially random, maybe even literally random, and we're locked into one of multiple paths based on a roll of a die because that is the nature of choice. There's freedom, but it can't be called "will".
You can contend as to where a human being lies between these two answers, but it's deductive - as far as I can tell, there's no third option, only some value between one and the other.
Even if this doesn't get the gears turning in your head, I would recommend specifically figuring out what you mean by free will if you wanted to make a Beast of it.