wayfriend wrote:Fist and Faith: Free Will is something not ruled by Particle Physics. What might it be ruled by? Is it unruled? What is 'ruled' here? Saying one thing that Free Will isn't is not the same as saying what it is.
Get off my back! What are you, my mother?

Yeah, very busy day (one sister had a party, and the other is driving up from NC so we're getting the house ready for guests), so I didn't answer very fully.
Maybe everything within the universe is ruled by cause & effect. All is just billiard balls bouncing around on the table. Knowing: how the interactions work; the arrangement of the balls at any given time; and the speed, direction of motion, and spin of every ball - you can calculate where every ball will be at any point in the future. Yeah, things are obviously much more complicated than that. A 3D setting. And much more than simply physical impacts. But you get the idea. So knowing: the position of every particle that makes up a person; the systems that the particles are grouped into; the rules for how all these particles and systems interact; etc - one can, as you go on to describe, know someone well enough to know what they will do in all situations.
Yes, that
does rob the person of free will. If you can say, "Based on my absolute knowledge of this person, which includes: past experiences of this situation, both the experiences and the consequences, and how it all affected and was stored within the person's brain; experiences of every other type, all of which have helped make this person what s/he is; what was eaten today and for the past few days, which effect mood and alertness; how much sleep s/he has had...; etc; etc - I know that this person will now choose to ___." All that is billiard balls bouncing around. There are no choices being made.
Free will is the ability to truly choose. Being outside of simple (even when it's extremely complex) cause & effect, so that we cannot know each choice someone will make no matter how perfectly we know the person. Under certain circumstances, particles group together, and take on certain characteristics. One of those groups is the human brain. One of those characteristics is self-awareness. Another is being outside of cause & effect.
Exactly how much free will - how many things and types of things we actually choose - is an interesting topic. I love chocolate ice cream, but you can keep the strawberry. I love Bach, but most of Mozart's compositions don't do much for me. Blue is far and away my favorite color. These things are not under my control. They differ from person to person, but they feel like absolute truths for me. I cannot choose to prefer strawberry, Mozart, or red. (Or, at the risk of derailing the thread, to be homosexual.) It's not under my control.
But I will not believe that all the variables I mentioned above, and the millions more I don't mention, made it inevitable that I would pick Bach's
Passacaglia & Fugue instead of BWV 540 last week. Or that, with three choices of breakfast cereal, all of which I like, I could not have chosen other than the one I did this morning. Or the exact moment I would get up and pour the coffee.
How can this be? How can we be
other than billiard balls? It's just how things are. Every square millimeter of the universe operates - or is set up/has the potential to operate - outside of the law of cause & effect. How do we calculate when a specific radioactive particle will decay? To my knowledge, we don't. It's truly random. A radioactive substance has a half-life of ten minutes. Some particles decay within moments, and others are still radioactive centuries later. And nobody can calculate which will go when. Quantum physics is like that, right? Random. Chaotic. Uncertain. Things happen without cause. I haven't the slightest idea how it all works, but there's lots of room for unforced decisions.