I don't believe in free will. This is why.

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 พ.ค. 2024
  • Learn more about differential equations (and many other topics in maths and science) on Brilliant using the link brilliant.org/sabine. You can get started for free, and the first 200 will get 20% off the annual premium subscription.
    Do humans have free will or to the the laws of physics imply that such a concept is not much more than a fairy tale? Do we make decisions? Did the big bang start a chain reaction of cause and effects leading to the creation of this video? That's what we'll talk about today.
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    00:00 Intro
    0:34 Has Physics Ruled Out Free Will?
    0:52 Physics FTW!
    4:14 Emergence
    8:10 Free Will?
    13:41 Decisions, Decisions
    16:31 Why Does it Matter?
    18:16 Learn More With Brilliant
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ความคิดเห็น • 16K

  • @6gradosproducciones
    @6gradosproducciones 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6796

    Whenever i watch a Sabine video about free will, it is never by choice.

    • @alexalke1417
      @alexalke1417 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +174

      Maybe you should make the decision to watch it again because choice isn't about free will.

    • @Naundob
      @Naundob 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +116

      Choice is not about freedom but reason. And reason is not free.

    • @JD-xk4yc
      @JD-xk4yc 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +43

      I know what you mean. I watch it because first I feel like I have to, and then I just give in; and it all happens so fast too.

    • @GizzyDillespee
      @GizzyDillespee 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +93

      Lawyers charge way too much to write up a will... but still, it shouldn't be free.

    • @EyeoIsis
      @EyeoIsis 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      😏👍🏽

  • @claypulley589
    @claypulley589 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +229

    "To be a TH-camr you don't need to know anything!"
    CLASSIC 😂

    • @LibertyorDie1976
      @LibertyorDie1976 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      100%

    • @flinch622
      @flinch622 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      That made my day also. I had to hit pause and stop laughing.

    • @adrianwright8685
      @adrianwright8685 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Amusing I suppose but completely incorrect, to be a "TH-camr" you have in fact to already know a great deal.

    • @Deltagravitics
      @Deltagravitics หลายเดือนก่อน

      There is more to response. And attention than what is in the surface. You must look into all forms of information and audial matrices seemed to be quantum in this subject. Mentally quantum not physically quantum.

    • @Deltagravitics
      @Deltagravitics หลายเดือนก่อน

      Let me abbreviate the organized quantum jump and how it's achieved. Using imagery the mind and audial matrix conformative agreements . As work. Amongst information flowing to constantly change what is experienced consciously in awareness.
      Having this information removed upon enacting the event is what she expressed as involuntary or nonconcious quantum jumps. They can relate to physical light as matter. Seen through a beings eyes. Percievable boundaries like the connection to holomorphic light and sound and what the eyes are. Contrary to what we "know"

  • @user-wz6oo9bq5j
    @user-wz6oo9bq5j หลายเดือนก่อน +35

    I'm a medical doctor . I happened to like physics and I find your channel is hervorragend. Keep up the good work!

    • @nadirceliloglu7623
      @nadirceliloglu7623 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Well,I am a Physicist and Sabine is not always correct unfortunately..

    • @laura5425
      @laura5425 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      @@nadirceliloglu7623 Now I'm curious to hear more ^^

    • @SergejVolkov17
      @SergejVolkov17 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@nadirceliloglu7623 that's what makes her so entertaining to watch. If she only stated commonly known facts, it would be boring. One just has to carefully evaluate her words, she's never shy to express her opinions

    • @nadirceliloglu7623
      @nadirceliloglu7623 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@SergejVolkov17 but some of her arguments are totally wrong. It does not matter whether she is shy or not to express her opinion.
      Science does not care about opinions,but cares only about facts!

    • @nadirceliloglu7623
      @nadirceliloglu7623 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@laura5425 Well you are curious but you are not a Physicist. Would you understand physics?

  • @jamesekennedy
    @jamesekennedy 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

    Sabine. I'm not a frequent youtube commenter, but I have to say thank you for this video. It has brought me a lot of peace. Weirdly. I don't know enough to know if you are right, but your explanation helped me a lot to leave my anxiety behind. In a very functional way, you have dramatically improved my life with this piece. Sadly, you didn't actually create free will denial, but explaining it to me turns out to have been more important. It releases me from feeling bad for the things I should have done or feeling pride in the things I have. The same goes for those around me. I don't need to feel bad or good because of what 'they' have done. Its just the universe doing its maths. Weirdly, it gives me some of the peace I can see that religion gives to others. In fact, if you decide to start a Free Will Denier religion, let me know where I can send me subscription.

    • @Ujjwal7120
      @Ujjwal7120 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      Same here brother I also used to think thay why bad things happen or why some people are lucky and priveleged . Well, you put it correctly, it's the universe doing it's maths
      Love and happiness from my side to you. Enjoy this life. Maybe life is a good or it can be a bad movie. But we have to enjoy it as much as possible no matter what happens❤❤❤😂😂

    • @futurehofer1564
      @futurehofer1564 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      this was a weird comment hopefully the universe calculates no more youtube comments for you lol

    • @plenarygrace
      @plenarygrace 5 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      The physical world is governed by physics, but the spirit world (your destination after "death") is governed by spiritual laws. You do have some control over your choices, as do we all. However limited. When in doubt, choose LOVE and you'll be fine.

    • @bigsmiler5101
      @bigsmiler5101 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@plenarygrace That's a lot like something I said in a comment about some atheist's video. Everyone needs to stop judging the Spiritual world because it doesn't make sense in the Non-Spiritual world. It's like saying there is no such thing as apples because oranges are more nutritious.

    • @bigsmiler5101
      @bigsmiler5101 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I'm confident life is just a TEST. God didn't like it that Angels had no choice but to love Him, so He created people with free will. Instead of creating us and instantly asking us which door we want to go through, He gives us a SHORT LITTLE (on the infinity scale) TEST with Lot's of situations, like "That isn't fair," and in the end, we have walked through our door. We follow our personal master.

  • @godfreypoon5148
    @godfreypoon5148 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1169

    I don't believe in free will, but I do believe in reasonably inexpensive will.

    • @STanDave
      @STanDave 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      Yeh,.. like at least clean the house sometimes...
      ...show some kind of affection,
      to the kids at least...?...

    • @johnvoices4087
      @johnvoices4087 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      It costs approx .00001 cents to be a good person.

    • @joddemason3468
      @joddemason3468 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I've heard that there may be infinite universes or dimensions. Could the multiverse have existed forever? Aren't these all real infinities?

    • @user49917
      @user49917 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      No such thing as universal basic will in this verse. You gotta earn your will, plebe😐

    • @mikullmac
      @mikullmac 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Well that's just your two cents.

  • @APaleDot
    @APaleDot 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +75

    "A man can do as he will, but not will as he will"
    - Arthur Schopenhauer

    • @AllyFin
      @AllyFin 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      That sure is a good way to sum it up.

    • @wprandall2452
      @wprandall2452 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

      what if you can't make your will come true?

    • @APaleDot
      @APaleDot 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@wprandall2452
      That's a lack of power or ability.

    • @wprandall2452
      @wprandall2452 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@APaleDot The fact that we exist itself is proof of free will. We have to have free will to have a working mind.

    • @APaleDot
      @APaleDot 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      @@wprandall2452
      Did you choose to have a mind?

  • @AmazingAntiTheist
    @AmazingAntiTheist หลายเดือนก่อน +91

    The late, great Christoper Hitchens was asked this. Hitchens always found it to be a boring question. When asked if he believed in free will he answered very simply... "I have no choice." I still think it was the best answer ever given to this question. Most people don't really think about what they're asking. They just can't seem to let go of the false notion that they are in control of their decisions.

    • @richardyates7280
      @richardyates7280 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I don't see how there could be free will for a philosophical materialist. Hitchen's own thoughts would also be the inevitable consequence of material forces, not conclusions freely arrived at by a supposedly brilliant thinker. Did he really believe that or was he just not willing to face up to the question? Funny that lack of curiosity.

    • @007SuperSoldier
      @007SuperSoldier หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@richardyates7280Understanding the absence of free will didn’t change anything for Hitchens. Hitchens enjoyed learning about the world and the thought process of figuring things out. He loved discussing it with other intelligent people. And he loved debating it with both intelligent and unintelligent people.
      None of that changes after knowing our brains are a train.

    • @mikem4481
      @mikem4481 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

      you made a decision to write this dvmb comment.

    • @donaldgunterman4143
      @donaldgunterman4143 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      We need to have the exact same starting conditions to exist as we are. I think eternal recurrence makes sense.

    • @KettlesAdvocate
      @KettlesAdvocate 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

      When you play chess against another, aren't the moves you make your choice? If there's several moves available, aren't you picking the ones you prefer rather than having them predetermined ? I think in life there are larger trends that are predetermined like your place of birth, your birth parents, your siblings, your physical structure and appearance unless you specifically go about changing it but this latter factor would indicate free will exists. Both exist concurrently.

  • @peterthompson6154
    @peterthompson6154 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I love videos like this because regardless of whether you agree or not with the presenter, they encourage you to think and ask yourself hard questions about what you actually believe in. So much of what we consume with our eyes and ears nowadays attempts to push an agenda or manipulate rather than stimulate thought and discussion.

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      What all academics have in common - they occupy themselves with dealing with "intangibles". That is "brain work" - they believe. The handling of the "tangible" part they leave up to those who have to work with their hands for money - not just think. And that of course makes them "the elite".

  • @tuttt99
    @tuttt99 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +259

    I used to worry about this, but then I realized that it feels like we do, and that's the best we can manage.

    • @effectingcause5484
      @effectingcause5484 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      We still have consciousness, no need for free will as long as I can watch the movie

    • @bobjohnson1633
      @bobjohnson1633 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Sounds like slavery and imprisonment.

    • @X3R0D3D
      @X3R0D3D 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

      @@bobjohnson1633 there is a vast divide between metaphorical "slavery and imprisonment" and actual "slavery and imprisonment." your decision to not distinguish in this case is suspicious.

    • @santacruzman
      @santacruzman 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      When the term was first used, it enabled us to talk about human functioning in terms that made sense to us. "Free" was meaningful because it referred to the experience of deliberating and making a choice among alternatives. But when you take the term "free" serious, it suggests that we are free to do anything we put our minds to. Some reflection shows that this ability is not real for us (despite how he might want to, a prisoner can not flap his wings and fly over the prison wall) so obviously this 'sense of freedom' 'is false. Duh. However, there is still the phenomenon, the experience, of willing something and then acting in order that it comes to pass. The meaning of "free" that most freewillers have in mind is not this radical sense, but simply the obvious sense of being able to consider alternatives in the chain of one's actable actions (physical and mental) and realize one from among those considered.
      Today, freewill is better understood as just an old name (literally false by today's understandings) used to refer to purposeful, meaningful behavior (it's language, ffs). It doesn't require a violation of physics, it just requires more than one system of physico-chemical control and the means to favor one over the other. One way to do it is to have two systems processing but with them having slightly different clocks or perspectives. The freedom/determinism distinction entirely misses the point.

    • @yourstruly5013
      @yourstruly5013 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      But can you really choose to wipe your ass or not freely ?

  • @lorienator
    @lorienator 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +185

    I'm a psychologist (albeit a junior one) and in my time I have come across people who have had some realisation (or sometimes they may say 'epiphany' ... rarely in a positive tone) that they don't have free will. It is very rare that this is based on the realisation that comes from understanding quantum mechanics or differential equations, but simply from learning over time how much of the world around them dictates their choices (or rather, limits them).
    The crisis that emerges is not one to be sniffed at; how would you feel if you had the thought that nothing was in your control? That you were on a fairground ride that you had never chosen to be in and that whatever curves, splashes (or even horrors) were always going to happen regardless of how much you loved of hated being on it? You are on a fixed rail in a single direction and all you can do is hunker down or throw your hands up in the air.
    Well, in my very humble opinion, I believe determinism to be the correct answer to the the question of free will, but the challenge is how to then answer the devastated people who, for them, this is hideous, terrible and stripping them of the meaning of their existence.
    I am kinda fortunate that I am a research psychologist and rarely client/patient/service user/insert-correct-name-here facing but also have the task of being pointed at by people who find out what I do and being ordered to "reveal your secrets!"
    Well ... from what I have seen: some people who seek out psychology due to past trauma (which is pretty much everyone) can take from this a certain comfort: if this was always going to happen to them, then they had no say and they no part and it was not their fault (which is never is), and sort of ... accept that this was 'fate'. They couldn't have done anything to stop it and absolve themselves of the self-hate and self-blame that is often par of the course for these people.
    Others become extremely bitter: for them, the fact that this would have always happened to them and that no matter how strong, how resilient, how brave they were, would never have made a difference. The cold, indifferent world would have always won.
    So, the absence of free-will to the individual (who is probably not a physicist/philosopher/etc.) seems to be more complex than the concept itself, because on our level it really does not matter at all if is exists, but what follows from the question of it. Outside of the noble disciplines of the physical sciences, the real world implications are way (WAY) more significant, and the idea may be thousands of years old, but the actuality of it is so new because the noble(er? 😛) disciplines of the social science are still trying to catch up.
    Some people may paraphrase the Tolkien quote: "Go not to the psychologists for an answer, for they will say both 'yes' and no'." And .... they have a point.
    My advice is probably going to be: go to a psychologist if you are seriously considering your existence and the doing so is having detrimental effects on your life.
    My other advice would be: you have as much free-will now as you did before this video/that appointment/that realisation, and consider what you could do now ... which is almost anything you can imagine. If you want to stop reading this rambling comment: do so! If you want to dress up like a chicken and move to Norway to study pine trees and howl at the moon every night: do so!
    If you have a choice (real or imagined) then that has to be worth something .... right?

    • @PlampinUK
      @PlampinUK 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      I am genuinely puzzled. If the things that happen were always going to happen, then presumably we have no moral authority to punish murderers, child abusers, thieves etc. They were always going to do what they were going to do? Is that part of what you mean? And victims should just accept that this is just what was always going to happen to them? Except, they might not be able to do so as they were always going to be upset and that won't change unless it is predetermined that it will - in which case, is there really any value in psychologists, therapists and psychiatrists who claim to be want to help people with distress?

    • @silverhawkroman
      @silverhawkroman 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It's not worth it to me and that should be fine, I'm so angry when people say there's no reason to. People like yours want to deter me from "dressing up in a chicken suit and go to Norway" if you catch my drift, so there's literally nowhere I can go... Are we not adults here? Do we have to step on eggshells because other people might like the idea? We should have more countries like Switzerland to provide that option to citizens but noooo we're all tax paying piggies so it's in your best interest to keep us around. So to that I'll say, I will exercise the little illusion of freedom to nope the f out. See y'all in the next permutation, it's not gonna be any different but hey at least I tried!

    • @minimal3734
      @minimal3734 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

      It matters absolutely nothing whether the will is "free" or not. There is a will, a choice and a responsibility. There appear to be good choices and bad choices. The individual carefully weighs the options and makes a decision to the best of his knowledge and belief, and from then on is responsible for the outcome. The mysterious "freedom", which nobody can really explain, makes no difference whatsoever.

    • @kevinhill1575
      @kevinhill1575 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      The scary answer is to accept the idea of god. That is, to accept as such is to realize that all, including your birth and position in life, is a part of a larger plan. After accepting that notion, cast away all concepts of determinism, and force people to live their life AS IF they had free will, yet knowing they don't.
      When you have acceptance of a grander plan, you calm down a bunch. Every pain, experience, or preference you have becomes meaningful. You don't know what the outcome will be because you can't compute it. Even so, if you accept that model and keep in mind as you're living your life, you won't fret. You won't fear. You won't experience anger.
      Hopefully, you can reach a point of rejoice.
      Knowing that there's a grand plan in motion to raise the consciousness of all gives you something to look forward to.
      Of course, it's crazy to talk about god on a science channel. Even so, I don't believe they're at odds with each other.

    • @hugegamer5988
      @hugegamer5988 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      I don’t see free will and determinism as mutually exclusive. Just as many events are out of our control, will or no, the universe floods us with far more data and possibilities than we could ever hope to know or explore. It’s like trying to simulate a far larger computer system on a computer - it’s not possible to process. Each decision, free or not, opens up nearly infinite possibilities. Emergent structures aren’t necessary subject to the same basis of rules their constituent parts follow in much the same way many virtual particles do this physically. TLDR whether you have free will or simply find yourself in the universe/future that is entangled with perceived agency and desire is simply looking at the same complex emergent phenomenon from different viewpoints.

  • @markallen8022
    @markallen8022 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Sabine, you do great transitions. I don't even realize I am watching a commercial about Brilliant until I am halfway through the ad.

    • @ah1548
      @ah1548 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      that's interesting. I thought "what, ads already?" when she started the part on emergent phenomena. - and switched off my attention and then had to re-wind 🙂

  • @benswanepoel4142
    @benswanepoel4142 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    I am so happy I found your channel Sabine. Thank you!

  • @justgetmeonhere
    @justgetmeonhere 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +580

    Sabine trolls the internet in her own dry humor way and I am constantly here for it. 😂

    • @louisrobertson9215
      @louisrobertson9215 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      That's why I love her 😂

    • @fredericklehoux7160
      @fredericklehoux7160 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      i love how she simply show all the piece we have that show the concept itself is contradictory and fundamentally meaningless from what we know of our universe

    • @ADUAquascaping
      @ADUAquascaping 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Yeah, BUT the Aliens say that we are ruining our planet. Implying that we have a choice 😮 👽 🛸 🌳 ♻️ 😂

    • @off6848
      @off6848 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@fredericklehoux7160 Wait I thought there is no such thing as meaning? Oh wait that's right the new trend is to say that meaning doesn't exist therefore we choose ourselves what matters. Oh wait..we don't choose anything its all determined and meaning does exist!
      Only theoretical physicists can be this stupid I swear.

    • @2ndfloorsongs
      @2ndfloorsongs 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      Sabina's my favorite troll. None of that ad hominem stuff; just straight, hardcore Mr Spock logic combined with classic German snark. Bravo!

  • @tuliowetler2289
    @tuliowetler2289 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +77

    "If you wanna become a youtuber, you don't have to know anything"
    I love this woman

    • @JackPullen-Paradox
      @JackPullen-Paradox 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I had wondered, What is a "TH-camr"? Is it just those who are presenting videos, or is it everyone who uses TH-cam? I should think the quote applies to a small subset of the video producers. After all, we'll try anything to get a view. We don't have to know what we are talking a about.

    • @HxTurtle
      @HxTurtle 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@JackPullen-Paradox a TH-camr is someone that produces videos for TH-cam (and tries to make a living off of it.)

    • @ShangZilla
      @ShangZilla 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Mmmmmmonster kill.

    • @FreethinkingMinistries
      @FreethinkingMinistries หลายเดือนก่อน

      And since it's impossible to **KNOW** that libertarian free will does not exist according to Sabine's assumptions of naturalistic determinism, I guess Sabine is proving her point.
      Consider the following argument.
      1. Sabine's belief that she does not possess libertarian freedom is either (i) determined by mindless stuff, (ii) determined by deceptive beings, (iii) completely random, or (iv) because she possesses libertarian freedom.
      2. Sabine's belief that she does not possess libertarian freedom is not determined by mindless stuff, determined by deceptive beings, or completely random.
      3. Therefore, Sabine's belief that she does not possess libertarian freedom is because she possesses libertarian freedom.
      For a defense of these premises, I recommend the paper I coauthored with J.P. Moreland entitled, “An Explanation and Defense of the Free-Thinking Argument.” This argument highlights the fact that it is ultimately self-defeating to reject the libertarian freedom to think.

  • @elizabethpears7644
    @elizabethpears7644 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    The free will conversation has become quite interesting. In my own experience, it seems whenever there was a leap to be made in my life I literally felt pushed in a particular direction. I may have chosen otherwise but in my heart it would have been wrong to take a different path at those moments.

    • @Nierez
      @Nierez หลายเดือนก่อน

      Almost like knowing you would not have chosen differently, right? 0 regrets for the past

    • @AllyFin
      @AllyFin 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Even on small decisions, choosing between two things that you're indecisive about is never random.

    • @tarotthoughtsinspace
      @tarotthoughtsinspace 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Agree… it always felt like a push and to fight it or go against it is to annihilate oneself.

  • @Randomdude7469
    @Randomdude7469 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    The notion of Free will arises from the imprecision in realizing your own thoughtprocess, in the same way the arrow of time arises from entropy due to lack of information.

  • @johnbabbidge7789
    @johnbabbidge7789 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +136

    We are like travellers on a train and must go where the rails take us, but we can enjoy the views from the window and the company of our fellow travellers.

    • @tomryan9827
      @tomryan9827 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      "No one lives in the slums because they want to. It's like this train. It can only go where the tracks take it."
      -Cloud Strife
      That was my favorite line in Final Fantasy 7. It made me realize the whole game was an exploration into the nature of identity and free will

    • @alfi9398
      @alfi9398 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I don't think we *can* enjoy the views from the window. We *must* enjoy or hate the view, just like we *must* stay on the tracks. Our experience are just as much out of our control, as are our actions. At least that's how I understand it...

    • @johnbabbidge7789
      @johnbabbidge7789 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You could well be right, although many scientists share this view there are others who hold that we do have either some free will or at least the ability to make responsible decisions and control of our emotions .An excellent book putting the case for that position is "Who's in Charge ? " by the neuroscientist Michael S Gazzaniga .

    • @philipd8868
      @philipd8868 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      You can always get off the train, and change to another train, or even go back to where you started, because you went the wrong way.

    • @jbruck6874
      @jbruck6874 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      So, did you try kidnapping the train driver? ;)

  • @TheJilayne
    @TheJilayne 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +346

    "I'm a physicist, please see a psychologist." This cracked me up! Between the content and Sabine's humour, my poor pea brain can barely take it. I love this channel.

    • @fernandoc4741
      @fernandoc4741 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      The problem is a misunterstand of what Free Will is. David Hume has an great explanation on this. He even give the example of Man sentenced to death by beheading. He looks at the sharpness of the axe and get terrified. He than knows the executioner never gave up on an hundred previous executions and get equally terrified. The Man doesn't get an mystical Idea of the executioner having an non caused free Will that wiill make him to give up. If there was no causuality than free will would be Impossible. An vicious murderer would be no more guilty of anything than anyone else as the very act of mudering had no cause in his inner persona. We would be as free as an adrift boat that goes with the wind. Truth is our actions become our habits and these Will become our persona.

    • @juanausensi499
      @juanausensi499 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      @@fernandoc4741 That great explanation of Hume looks like appeal to consequences fallacy to me (if we did not have free will, that would be bad)

    • @fernandoc4741
      @fernandoc4741 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@juanausensi499 Appeal to consequence is completely rational. It was later adopted by Kant and embraced by William James pragmatism. For instance. Life does have an purpose is 100% logical. Because If It doesnt than there is no purpose believing It either does or doesnt. Even If the the chance It does was close to zero, the rarionale would still bet It does.

    • @Moz4rt08
      @Moz4rt08 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@fernandoc4741 I have not studied these topics in quite a long time, so forgive my ignorance. Is it possible the reality of a situation (i.e. Whether or not we have free will) is actually irrational or illogical? Does everything need to be rational and logical?

    • @fernandoc4741
      @fernandoc4741 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@Moz4rt08 Logical or Ilogical how? I guess the example gave by Hume of the Man sentenced to death was to show that the very concept of undestetministic free will makes no sense to our minds (the executioner is as terrifing as the sharp Blade). Hume also Denied that reason alone had any Power on our minds. It could only have an Power If It brings us some emoticon (ex fear of the consequence it we take an decision instead of another)

  • @drewsharratt564
    @drewsharratt564 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    During my late teens, a girl asked me if I "believed in fate?"
    It seemed obvious to me that of course fate exists because wether we choose to travel the globe, throw ourselves under a train or devote our lives to charitable causes, then surely THAT is what was fated.
    I think its only really an issue (psychologically) if you KNOW how its supposed to turn out BEFORE it happens. However, I take consolation in the fact that, try as we might, we cant know how the book ends until it's written! #Spoilers! 😄

  • @rickniles6056
    @rickniles6056 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +20

    The key insight of this whole video that got me screaming at the screen "Yes, yes, Yes!". Was that the brain is a calculator and we can't know the result of the calculation until it's done. That waiting for the the calculation to be completed is what people call "Free Will". That sums it all up for me. That is, your brain is making decisions and doing comparisons and calculations, but given the same input it's just like any other calculator and it's going to come up with the same answer. There was a story on NPR a few years ago about a women with short term memory loss that reset every five minutes or so. Given the same input she would answer EXACTLY the same, the same face expression, the same way she paused, everything to the point it was hard to believe it wasn't just a repeat of the recording. That was extremely insightful to me that, yes, we are just organic computers.

    • @alexissvetrev
      @alexissvetrev 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      but a calculator that has AI running in it, not just a static calculator, and it doesn't just automatically calculate stuff, it really depends on where we put our attention at and what we decide to think about. it is not just a calculator mandating what we have to think about, its more like neural nets that can solve problems for us and give us solution, but we decide which problems to give it. that doesn't seem to defy free will to choose what we think about, just my 2 cents

    • @costaldevomito
      @costaldevomito 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@alexissvetrev exactly. Where are these inputs coming from? If there is no free will, then how can one choose to study the brain thru neuroscience and change it? You can alter your brain in different ways by making difference choices, this will alter this "organic computer" because neuroplasticity is a thing

    • @dimkk605
      @dimkk605 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Cool! Can you give me a link of the video depicting this woman? Thanks!!!

    • @Wingnut353
      @Wingnut353 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      That's the issue though... that woman's brain was being "fixed" in that loop... so perhaps her free will was limited, responding exactly the same to the same stimuli doesn't disprove free will either it just proves that the person would choose the same actions each time.

  • @5h5hz
    @5h5hz 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +65

    "I find the question stunningly uninteresting" oh how I wish I could use this line in work meetings!
    Edit: 2:06 - "for simple questions like 'does free will exist?'" hahaha I love Sabine's style so much

    • @curcumin417
      @curcumin417 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Is there even an 'I' if freewill doesn't exist?

    • @5h5hz
      @5h5hz 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@curcumin417 that depends on whether consciousness exists ;)

    • @sigigle
      @sigigle 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@curcumin417 The only true "I" is our consciousness.
      Everything else is outside of that and "other".

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Free Will Smith...

    • @Eliphas_Leary
      @Eliphas_Leary 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Of course you can use Hossenfelderisms. There's plenty more where that one came from.

  • @vridrich99
    @vridrich99 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    I, for one, did not click on this video by my free will. I clicked on it because of who I am , because of my inclinations, tastes and interests.
    And those I certainly did not choose. I learned what they are by introspection, the same way I learned what my favourite colour is, my favourite food or my sexual identity etc etc.
    I didn't choose my hobbies, my favourite colour; and I can't choose - for example - a different favourite colour tomorrow, or to be religios.
    I believe I clicked on this video because I always would've clicked on this video ; had I decided against it I always would've decided against it.
    And so on and so forth. Keeping it short. Because I decide to. Or did I?

    • @crimsonguy723
      @crimsonguy723 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      You always would have (or wouldn't have) clicked on the video, unless one of the random 'disturbances' happens that Sabine mentions in the video. I take this to mean that in each moment there are an infinite amount of causes/conditions which play into whether or not you would have clicked, if one (or many) of those causes/conditions randomly plays out differently, the outcome of whether you clicked can change. Do you agree?
      It kind of reminds me of Electro-magnetic Interference and how one (or many) bits in a stream of data can 'randomly' flip.

  • @TheBigFella
    @TheBigFella หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you for taking the time to do this

  • @basharhunien906
    @basharhunien906 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Your way to explain things is not just really clear but also hilarious😄

  • @Jedimaster36091
    @Jedimaster36091 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +252

    Sabine is killing it with her humorous bits, smartly added throughout the serious stuff. I want more of it please.

    • @xXxNoisemaker
      @xXxNoisemaker 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I want less of it, please.

    • @MrBradWi
      @MrBradWi 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Ditto on the less of it. Sometimes it's too glib. Sometimes it's trying too hard. Sometimes it just doesn't land. Sometimes it's lame....and... Sometimes it's perfect. That's 1 out of 5, leaving 4 /5 of it as an unnecessary waste of time that distracts from the point.
      Given that Germanness is a hard edge to soften, at least for American ears, I wouldn't remove it entirely, just edit it down one more time.
      Humor and humility go much further than fake smiles, or a false cheery attitude, or hair and makeup, and clothes. But, it doesn't need to come at a breathlessly delivered pace, like a stand-up routine.
      The content IS the good stuff.

    • @GoDodgers1
      @GoDodgers1 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      EASILY AMUSED!!!!

    • @seriousmaran9414
      @seriousmaran9414 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, but her statement is ascientific. Based entirely on belief, it has no empirical evidence...😊

    • @fritt_wastaken
      @fritt_wastaken 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      ​@@seriousmaran9414 belief in free will has no empirical evidence.
      Saying free will doesn't exist is like saying there's no invisible unicorn in my room right now. That's just a null hypothesis. Someone who claims that there is a unicorn has to present evidence

  • @jonnporter6081
    @jonnporter6081 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +174

    Am I the only one who can't wait for the days when a photon can go left or right without being judged for its motives?

    • @marcdraco2189
      @marcdraco2189 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Double slit? I did that at home with a cat toy and a very fine piece of copper wire.
      I was almost 60 years old and saw it done when I was a kid.
      So just 4.5 volts was all it took to totally blow my mind.

    • @bigfletch8
      @bigfletch8 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      The mind is actuall experiencing a " light breeze "
      This is ALL about, in a sense, parallel universes (or reality more accurately ).
      My toenails have no choice. Dna mixed with so called " light " frequencies dictate their path. The owner, " me " (not the body,) can choose to ignore them untill they cause disruption to the body. The choice being, " I" create comfort or pain and infection.
      This principle applies to all " planes of relativity ", both physical and mental, where choice is limited to a cause and effect process, which activates the " authority " of " I ", which is where the next " plane " kicks in, being quantum mechanics. Still in the cause and effect realm, but, as with all planes, more subtle than the previous one.
      As with the foundation of physics and chemistry, ALL arenas of relativity are predictable, which is why metaphysical prophesies and predictians can be recognised (by those past a certain level...NOT catagarised specifically by the intellect. This is why there is such awareness disparity amongs our " brightest ".
      Ulimiately the self realized amongst us actually " contract out " of the predictable zone, and simply create. The Creator created creators.

    • @serversurfer6169
      @serversurfer6169 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      No, lots of conservatives are tired of having their motives questioned. 😜

    • @markkil
      @markkil 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      that day may have just come

    • @mentalslave8451
      @mentalslave8451 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      We are all limited by our senses and our interpretation of those sense's, once reality is realized it's too late... Unless you are uninterested about the motives of direction photons are spinning, then you're a demon that needs to be excised from "the" cult..ure

  • @mickredd
    @mickredd 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Wow. I am a biologist whose dream died. I feel your pain. The 3-5 year grant period wrecks those who want to go down untrodden paths. I love your videos.

  • @tomryan9827
    @tomryan9827 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I read Michael Montaigne's essay on determinism when I was a teenager, and free will never made a shred of sense to me afterwards. The defenses of it seemed terrible, geniuses like William James and Sartre willingly choosing, in my eyes, to be stupid just this once. The idea of "will" itself, even the idea of a choosing entity, these are just made up ideas that form the structures of our perception. The burden of proof is on these suppositions, not the other way around

  • @improveourselves3929
    @improveourselves3929 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +43

    Lol "I'd find it creepy if the decisions.. came from somewhere else than in my brain." Agreed! :) Enjoyed that one, Sabine. Having a science background, and in taking a philosophy class, I actually wrote a paper on the subject which I entitled, Soft Free Will, wherein I argue just about the same thing, that ultimately the constituent details determine our decisions, but the feeling that we have free will is useful to the degree that we feel in control of our own thoughts. Your elucidation of the creepy feeling it would be for something outside of us to make the decisions, is a beautiful and personal synopsis, and I thank you for the smile and the chuckle as I remember pondering this topic. I appreciate your detailed and fun-filled explanation. Thanks and keep up the fun videos! :-)

    • @gulaschnikov5335
      @gulaschnikov5335 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      personal anecdotal argument: I don't always feel in control of my thoughts but i still think it is my brain where they are coming from.

    • @Joyness333
      @Joyness333 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@gulaschnikov5335 As someone diagnosed with OCD, I definitely do not always feel in control of my thoughts, but the realization that some of those thoughts and compulsions (mainly the OCD ones) could be just the raw mechanisms of the mind without the accompanying sequence of events, goals, and over-arching narratives to make them all make sense, is really intriguing to me.

    • @CookiesRiot
      @CookiesRiot 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I don't know which is more unsettling:
      My will could be controlled externally by an unknown puppeteer.
      My true self could be external to physics, yet trapped in a link with this fragile meat sack.

    • @off6848
      @off6848 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I act as if I have freewill therefore I have freewill, because it is impossible to act as something without a referent.

    • @DavidMacKayE
      @DavidMacKayE 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      She never really did address the question did she? I'm still left equally dumbfounded as when I did or was before watching this video. Didn't learn anything new here

  • @ems4884
    @ems4884 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    I once told my psychotherapist that I didn't believe in free will. He was very frustrated with me at that moment. He might have had a point. Even if we do not have true free will, it might not be psychologically healthy to shape your life around that belief.

    • @ralphmacchiato3761
      @ralphmacchiato3761 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Certainly. It might also not be healthy to be an African experiencing a famine.

    • @thesupergreenjudy
      @thesupergreenjudy 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      That's my issue with determinism. It seems to be a self-fulfilling prophecy and you run the risk of a defeatist attitude - but then if we don't have free will you probably can't help yourself ;-) I think decision making is far too complex and determinism (in my view) remains a philosophical rather than a scientific viewpoint - I think a lot of findings and studies have been wildly interpreted to support this viewpoint. Scientists don't like to admit that it is hugely intermixed with philosophy and although some findings are really interesting, they are often used to draw rather far fetched conclusions. But that's just my opinion of course.

  • @Nierez
    @Nierez หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Sounds pretty good to me. Very in line with the "be yourself is all that you can do" I believe in.

  • @gustavomachado307
    @gustavomachado307 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Your videos are a joy to watch, Sabine.

  • @YukiXK
    @YukiXK 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +125

    I had this realisation when I was 12 that every action was was caused by every action before it and so on, and nearly had a breakdown trying to find someone else who understood what I was talking about because none of my classmates or teachers or even older 20 year old friends on the internet at that time did. I didn't know that it was called predeterminism at the time and wasn't until a couple years later that I finally found out. Meanwhile all throughout my 12-14 year old school years, I was losing my mind arguing with both religious and non-religious teachers about how free will didn't exist because of this and it was awful because I thought I was going insane because no one else understood what I was saying.

    • @chitra_888
      @chitra_888 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Right, I believe this too. I had this realisation only recently at 27 now that free will is essentially determinism, as Elon Musk puts it. I think that we just constantly reap the karma of our actions from this and also previous lifetimes and that what we experience in this life is thus very little that is created from our own "free will" in this present life. Because of all this, I think some of the things we may truly want we may not experience until future lifetimes; if we are aware enough to sow the right seeds now that is.

    • @macjeffff
      @macjeffff 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Actually, this kind of determinism was used by Aquinas centuries ago to prove the existence of God. Just google his 5 proofs for the existence of God. It's pretty elementary, and it rests on the beliefs you're describing. One of the nice side effects is that God (in the Christian belief) confers free will on humankind from the get-go.

    • @thearchitect5405
      @thearchitect5405 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      @@macjeffff The "proofs of god" are not scientific proofs, nor are they literal proofs, they can only be called proofs under a very lenient definition of "proof". The same way a doodle on a piece of paper can function as a proof of concept for something totally unrelated.

    • @macjeffff
      @macjeffff 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@thearchitect5405 Actually, they are well-known logical proofs. Aquinas is still considered one of the finest logicians of all time. Even if you disagree, you would probably be fascinated by the work. Aquinas's proofs for the existence of God are easy to find. Check them out!

    • @nerrrh
      @nerrrh 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @YukiXK are you me?

  • @epicooldude1236
    @epicooldude1236 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +182

    hi!, im 16 and you're genuinely my favorite science youtuber. You always keep everything grounded while still discussing interesting topics, keep it up😁

    • @thebomber7641
      @thebomber7641 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      That is some nice intention from your age perspective. In my 16 i was interested in running around while building some concept of a sublime god around running. :D

    • @wb5mct
      @wb5mct 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And on the other hand, you have a wart.

    • @scoopnumrrrratnumoosna7550
      @scoopnumrrrratnumoosna7550 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Keep up the good work kid, maybe you‘ll be as smart as Dr Sabine one day

    • @charlesbrowne9590
      @charlesbrowne9590 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You’d probably like Sean Carrol. He’s awesome.

    • @epicooldude1236
      @epicooldude1236 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @Conon the Binarian⚧ haha I'd love to be a scientist but I'd hate to have to teach people. I think I'll just be an engineer of some sort, but thanks for the advice 😄

  • @ruir9278
    @ruir9278 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Since my teenage years, I've tried but never quite understood what is meant by the notion of 'Free Will' meant, (its has a very fuzzy etymology and seems to be wholly made up by religious types and kept alive by philosophers). It's a totally superfluous concept. What is clear that we humans have a decision making capability that can be shaped to some extent and that is enough. I typically derive a lot of insight from Sabine's videos (a big thank to you, Sabine for that) but however most discussions I hear on free will by public intellectuals get convoluted and messy and this video is no exception.

  • @zimzam9166
    @zimzam9166 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Actually the algorithm decided I would watch this video

    • @elevationmoto6208
      @elevationmoto6208 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      The algorithm definitely does not have free will.

  • @michaelq8892
    @michaelq8892 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +155

    My Grandfather was something of a philosopher, he was also a coal miner, and a doughboy in WW1. He'd been a few places and seen a lot of trouble and he told me once that a man had about as much free will as a rock in an avalanche. I guess that is really true.

    • @andrewguthrie2
      @andrewguthrie2 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Or indeed, a man in an avalanche.

    • @dhungryarchitect
      @dhungryarchitect 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      this is very inline with easter philosophy. i love how they go hand in hand with science. unlike the dogmas of Christianity and other biblical religions.

    • @lukamodric458
      @lukamodric458 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      Powerlessness of an individual in grand scheme of geopolitics doesnt deny free will of that individual.

    • @captainobvious8037
      @captainobvious8037 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      That sounds more like it's about being powerless.
      The topic of the video got basicall nothing to do with it.

    • @anyone6830
      @anyone6830 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@andrewguthrie2 why is this funny

  • @coolshah1662
    @coolshah1662 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    You're nearing the the 1million mark. Congrats and well deserved. Very informative video as always.

  • @dorotagalas869
    @dorotagalas869 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You are amazing ! Love your posts , find all of it fascinating !

  • @janetmooremendias233
    @janetmooremendias233 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I do not be believe in the concept of free will.
    A person makes decisions based on experience, availability; and/or other factors.
    Love your candor
    03/05/24

  • @whafrog
    @whafrog 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +78

    Love this video. I think it's clear most people don't even know what they mean by "free will", and they're picking the wrong aspect of it to get all angsty about it.

    • @smeeself
      @smeeself 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Indeed.

    • @jordanmatthews1466
      @jordanmatthews1466 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      If free will does not exist, then neither does choice. If all choice is an illusion then nothing exists because then EVERYTHING is an illusion. One cannot choose to watch a video about free will if someone does not choose to make such a video. If everything is predetermined, there's no point in doing anything as all was intended from the start.

    • @smeeself
      @smeeself 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@jordanmatthews1466 There is no interpretation of free will that negates choice. Unless you're using some other definition of free will.
      Where did your source YOUR definition?

    • @Greg-yu4ij
      @Greg-yu4ij 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Everything is an illusion except our free will, which we use to manifest our reality. Now I just need to use my will instead of letting my clockwork body make the decisions for me.

    • @neyson220293
      @neyson220293 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      ​@@smeeself there is a clear correlation between free will and choice, if we define "choosing" as the act of determining something is undetermined... you can't choose if the decision has been pre-determined, and if the decision has been pre-determined then you have no free will; therefore if you have no free will, you have no choice.
      basically, if free will does not exist, it means all your decisions are pre-determined by your DNA the way computer decisions are pre-determined by algorithms, therefore you have no choice

  • @Linda-lf3rj
    @Linda-lf3rj 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +121

    You do such great job explaining things so we can understand. I love your dry, serious humor. Cracks me up.

    • @halberderdier8073
      @halberderdier8073 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Sometimes she reminds me of the narrator in the BBC version of the hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy....

    • @LNVACVAC
      @LNVACVAC 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Her "explanation" on this matter is pretty shitty.
      If free will exists or not is not the fundamental matter or problem.
      The fundamentall matter/problem is that there is an infinitude of concepts and theories instrumentalizing or adressing the term free will, and there is no consilience among them and their premisses.
      Before defining if free will is real it is necessary to estabilish a stable and fact apt concept for free will, with the realization this concept probably will be specialized to a single scientific or philosophic discipline and general theory, not a universal term conscerning the whole of special science neither the whole of philosophy, and that this term will not necessarilly fit every general theory in any discipline. And just after discover if there is any other previous vulgar concept of free will that matches the scientific specialized one.
      Many psychologists and medics consider free will the simple resistence of an individual to ambiental and symbolic influence and manipulation.
      Super deterministic physics doesn't have any evident link to the emergence of symbolic and emotional systems. Specialized Science doesn't include physics exactly because the methodology is not compatible, its not purelly a matter of scale.
      Also, science is mutable and is limited by definition, science doesn't have free reign over reality or reality matters. Reality is not limited or defined by physical or material facts and conditions. There are no intrisic physical properties that make a house a house or a boat a boat. In the same way we are able to identify a human being but we are still unable to conflate and generalize the ontology of being human with the scientific study of its properties.
      Physicists go and talk about laws, but still there are no absolute and perpetual evidence these are laws and physics doesn't answer where from these properties or laws emerge (gravity is the perfect and most evident example), physics doesn't even understand CP Assimetry, and right now the big bang is being questioned.

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I didn't even realise that Germans have an actual sense of humour, until I "met" Sabine here - Basil Fawlty didn't think so either 😂

    • @desmondrathbone435
      @desmondrathbone435 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I don't get how you can complement someone on their humour after giving the impression you agree with a talk like that? Who are you actually talking to? (And who am I actually thinking I am replying to?). Considering there is no free will, then there is no one in there making any choice to be funny, even in a dry way. As it is simply a mechanism of the Universe playing out as a result of things that have happened in the past.

    • @Oh_So_Based
      @Oh_So_Based 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You just need to say : "Whatever it is, it isn't compatible with what we know about the laws of nature" 😂

  • @atelier27
    @atelier27 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    “Let’s stick with the particles that are stable.” Good advice for every situation.

  • @asprywrites6327
    @asprywrites6327 5 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Good Lord. What a difference 2 years makes! Unlike your previous free will video, this one wasn't abrasive but instead very educational. Sometimes funny, all the time mature and not at all condescending. Thank you for your perspective. Great video.

  • @avis7709
    @avis7709 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +66

    This may help to wrap your head around why you feel like you have free will when you actually don't: You can choose any option you want, but you can only choose the one you want. The one that is the result of the "calculation", as Wittgenstein puts it.

    • @craigslist6988
      @craigslist6988 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      you also can't choose any option, you can only choose something your brain is able to imagine which we know is a gjostabulicism, the philosophical equivalent to a mathematical number set, the set of all ideas and thoughts a person has. All subsequent thoughts have to be derivatives of the person's gjostsbuli, so it can only be expanded by exposure to a different gjostsbuli.
      And of course you couldn't have predicted I would refer to gjostsbulicism because I made up the word, but the idea I used it to describe is most likely as equally foreign to you as the word so it's fitting.

    • @philipoakley5498
      @philipoakley5498 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Free Will: The chance in a million that actually happens! Son of a Bayes!

    • @nPr26_50
      @nPr26_50 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Decisions are by definition commitments to ones desires. Of course you can only choose the choice you're making because that is what a choice is. This argument doesn't really move the debate anywhere.

    • @CoolDude209112
      @CoolDude209112 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You don't "choose" anything. Your brain is a complex system of neurons that makes calculations based on the data its given and comes up with answers, and that's it. The regularity in which the brain comes up with an answer is why people swear they are in control of the system in the first place. There's no free will, and nothing extra is going on but a highly complex biological information computing machine in your skull.

    • @Ergeniz
      @Ergeniz 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Free will as a [literal] concept makes no sense because it doesn't take into account the factors consistently outside our control. For example, the fact we were born humans, the parents who engaged in coitus to create our embryo, the genetic inheritance from those parents (race, height, IQ, various other predispositions), the environment, our family's socioeconomic status and so on. All of these things contribute to who we are and how we develop, thus from the very moment of our conception free will is impossible.
      I think that most people don't think too deeply about it and its more a shorthand to describe decision making and thus varying levels of personal accountability. Sure, fine. But determinism accounts for that so its still a misleading term.

  • @mattgray666
    @mattgray666 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    "The idea that Will is all we need has led to utopian plans ... all of which is somehow magically supposed to pop out of nowhere if we just have the will. This belief in free will puts the blame on individuals when really the problem is the way we've organized our societies."
    Well said.

    • @naturallaw4945
      @naturallaw4945 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      How can the 'problem' be how we 'organized' our societies when we had no free will to either organize anything or create anything outside of deterministic marbles bouncing around with occasional random events? We apparently had no choice in the matter, so why worry about it? If you seek to change the way our society is organized then you believe you have the free will to do so.
      You can't have it both ways.

    • @Karifean
      @Karifean 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@naturallaw4945 Sadly, we don't have the free will to choose not to care about the problems humans face as a result of how we deterministically organized ourselves. "Why worry about it?" is just another invocation that we supposedly have free will.

    • @marianaa6285
      @marianaa6285 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@naturallaw4945 tou can change reality, but if you will do it and how you will do it will depend on causes and circumstances that came before

  • @subzilver
    @subzilver 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    People who act strongly deterministically and make decisions based on past events are generally also referred to as rational. I think determinism and free will are not even opposites in the end. Perhaps one is even strongly dependent on the other. After all, free will does not mean that you can make all decisions chaotically independent of the past. What we perceive as free will is ultimately nothing other than determinism itself.

  • @adampalic9627
    @adampalic9627 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    "please, don't blame me of this, its bot my idea" speaks for everything.

  • @aidanoleary1986
    @aidanoleary1986 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +63

    Sabine's recognition of the provisional nature of science lends huge credibility to her message. Also, I love the deadpan german humour. We need more Sabines and less dogma!

    • @yanapostolides601
      @yanapostolides601 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This is pure dogma. "Free Will" has nothing to do with science. Science has nothing to do with it. Sapolski wants to "Abolish the criminal justice system" because he doesn't believe in it. (Of course he doesn't offer anything to replace it with).

    • @BogdanBaudis
      @BogdanBaudis 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "provisional" is the word you can apply to every human endeavor.

    • @desmondrathbone435
      @desmondrathbone435 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I get a bit freaked out by someone with a German accent speaking about there being no free will...

    • @aidanoleary1986
      @aidanoleary1986 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@desmondrathbone435😂

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I hate to tell you - she is nowhere close to what a German is. Even her accent is most certainly not of somebody who grew up in Germany.
      And no - Germans are known for their "hands-on approach". This academic person is all about intangible and talk.

  • @TheCynicalPhilosopher
    @TheCynicalPhilosopher 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

    I hope so, because the idea that I am responsible for all the stupid things I do is horrifying.

    • @sisyphus_strives5463
      @sisyphus_strives5463 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Haha, no you would still be responsible by the very definition of responsibility. Although perhaps childhood foibles can be excused to a certain extent.

    • @brothermine2292
      @brothermine2292 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      The idea that you're not responsible for all the stupid things you do is somewhat horrifying too. And the horror is multiplied by a factor of 8 billion.

    • @battragon
      @battragon 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      It's your lucky day.
      In order for you to know what you're responsible for, you should start by defining what you mean by "I".
      Okay, I'll be waiting here; Give me a call when you've arrived at the complete definition.

    • @battragon
      @battragon 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@sisyphus_strives5463 Shaky logic. 🤔 (Highly irresponsible.)

    • @Gunni1972
      @Gunni1972 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      You are not gonna like my answer:
      You are only responsible for What you think, What you feel, What you say and What you do. Or Don't. 😅 Your decision. But here is a tip: when you get to a problem, you can ask yourself always: When? Where, How, Why or what/who? and determine which aspect of the problem you want to explore. It's a long term deconstruction of behavioral cul-de sacs. and a fascinating journey.

  • @Trogramming
    @Trogramming 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I actually had a rap-debate on this topic with a friend who's since passed on.

    • @Trogramming
      @Trogramming 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

      "Doesn't believe in quantum jumps"?
      Does Sabine subscribe to hidden variables?

    • @smeeself
      @smeeself 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

      👍

  • @captainbeaver_man903
    @captainbeaver_man903 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I agree with what you're saying. I was lost up until about 15:50 when it came back around to explaining choice. If Im getting this right, what you are saying is that choice is not free will and a lack of free will doesn not mean a lack of choice.

    • @smeeself
      @smeeself หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      👍

    • @peregrinecovington4138
      @peregrinecovington4138 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      So it's completely worthless conclusion that means nothing. What a vapid contribution to the world.

  • @IusedtohaveausernameIliked
    @IusedtohaveausernameIliked 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +159

    I love how Sabine can talk about complex topics in relatively simple language and still manage to throw in a few devastating jokes in a really subtle way. Where does humour come from? Is it a choice?

    • @olddecimal2736
      @olddecimal2736 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Choice doesn’t exist, I thought that was the point.

    • @IusedtohaveausernameIliked
      @IusedtohaveausernameIliked 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@olddecimal2736 Theoretically it doesn't exist but somehow we humans seem to pull it off anyway. At least the illusion of it, and for our puny brains that's good enough.

    • @IusedtohaveausernameIliked
      @IusedtohaveausernameIliked 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      @@olddecimal2736 I choose free will even if it is an illusion.

    • @pedrolouro9476
      @pedrolouro9476 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Humor comes from your need to please and keep the listener interested in what you are saying.

    • @rboland2173
      @rboland2173 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Generally, humor doesn't come from Germany that's for sure. Sabine is legit the funniest German I have ever heard speak, but humor is subjective, so it could just my perception.

  • @five-toedslothbear4051
    @five-toedslothbear4051 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

    I started watching this video, then I decided I wasn’t going to, and I ended up watching it anyway. I think it was determined that I would find out that my decisions are determined.

    • @lobotomizedamericans
      @lobotomizedamericans 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Pre-determined, yes.

    • @darinb.3273
      @darinb.3273 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I started watching it and thought for a person with a brain, decided to consciously make a decision to make a video about not having the ability to make a video she had no choice in the matter or among the matter. Sorry that's nonsense.

    • @BardicLiving
      @BardicLiving 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@darinb.3273 It may depend on whether one sees conscious decisions as having causes -- for instance, you could say that the decision to create the video was "caused" by the desire to do so.

    • @darinb.3273
      @darinb.3273 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@BardicLiving It may depend on whether one sees conscious decisions as having causes
      ME: Perhaps this would mean outside control of one's own mind, the cause comes from within one's own brain.
      -- for instance, you could say that the decision to create the video was "caused" by the desire to do so.
      ME: Yet again that desire was a choice. The same as the decision by you or your spouse (if you are married) of what to eat for dinner, that's a free choice by one or both of you.
      Free will
      noun
      the power of acting without the constraint of necessity or fate; the ability to act at one's own discretion.
      adjective
      (especially of a donation) given readily; voluntary.
      EXAMPLE; "free-will offerings"

    • @lobotomizedamericans
      @lobotomizedamericans 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Once we realize that "the future is determined by the past", we'll understand that this includes any and all causes of anything. That means all "choices", "feelings", "brain states", etc were all pre-determined at the point of primordial nucleosyntheses at the birth of the universe. Even the question "does it matter" is irrelevant. It simply "is what it is and will be."

  • @stephenridgway2720
    @stephenridgway2720 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Weighing outcomes and making decisions to move your situation towards the most favourable outcome is life is good enough for me.

  • @IceBlueBeard
    @IceBlueBeard 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    The best example that nailed the free will concept for me is this thought experiment: Imagine you knew some twins and you knew for certain that one of them had free will and the other did not. You have access to all the resources in the universe and your mission is to find out which one is which. How can you find out? You can't, because having free will and not having free will is identical. It doesn't matter what you try to do, you can't create any experiment to tell which one is which.

    • @CT-pi2gl
      @CT-pi2gl 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      You cannot prove consciousness either by such external means. Yet you personally experience direct evidence for it at every waking moment.

    • @IceBlueBeard
      @IceBlueBeard 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@CT-pi2gl It depends on what you mean by consciousness, if you just use it as another name for free will then of course it's the same. But if you mean being aware of their surroundings and being self aware then we actually do have some ways to test for self awareness. There is this simple experiment called the mirror test. You put a noticable mark on an animal (or human) somewhere where he can't directly see it, then you put him in a front of a mirror and if he touches the mark using the mirror it means he is self aware of himself. Humans pass this test at the age of two.

    • @HermanVonElsewhere
      @HermanVonElsewhere 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      To conclude, if you can't imagine how to observe something, it can't exist.

    • @CT-pi2gl
      @CT-pi2gl 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I don't think the mirror test can prove the level of consciousness or sense of personhood we are discussing. I could program a robot running software to understand the relationship between the mirror object and its own structure or "body," and use the mirror to perform inspections and maintenance of itself. All without deviating from a set if "IF... THEN" statements, or forming any sense of "Me."

    • @IceBlueBeard
      @IceBlueBeard 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@CT-pi2gl "I don't think the mirror test can prove the level of consciousness or sense of personhood we are discussing"
      Yes it can. If you could program or create an AI robot so complex that it had the ability to recognize itself and perform inspections and maintenance on itself independantly in uncontrolled circumstances, then it would be a consciousness being, it would have a state of awareness. That is exactly what it would be. I hate to tell you this but you and your brain is just a very complex and sopisticated computer and if we could create that in a computer, the computer would become a sentient being.

  • @rmck6830
    @rmck6830 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I have only recently come across your site, but definitely love it. Look forward to catching up with all your other videos. Keep up the excellent work. I bet it would be very interesting and satisfying to sit down and have a coffee with you.

  • @alikifahfneich
    @alikifahfneich 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +133

    Dr. Sabine, Thank you very much for reopening this Topic with a wider range of research and study!

    • @scoopnumrrrratnumoosna7550
      @scoopnumrrrratnumoosna7550 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Now, give her your money!

    • @bornonthebayou7926
      @bornonthebayou7926 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      She didn't have a choice.

    • @roboparks
      @roboparks 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@bornonthebayou7926 choice and Free will are 2 different things.

    • @2ndfloorsongs
      @2ndfloorsongs 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Not that it makes that much difference if you have free will or not. It's such a small part of the equation that ignoring it doesn't change the result.

    • @gammaraygem
      @gammaraygem 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      NIL
      This is all based on one assumption; that the laws we discover here, are the same throughout the universe. And, we use our mind to "discover" those laws.
      We have nothing at all without thought. Yet, those rigorous and methodical scientists who swear by Reason and Logic, do not know what thoughts are, what they are made of nor where they originate and are incaopable of silencing their inner monolgue for as little as 30 seconds.
      And, we see that those who could, can somehow escape those "laws" we pretend to know. Wim Hof is just one small example.
      Also, those who originated (probably unwittingly)the religions were among those who had mastered this ability of freely exploring reality without that unbearable noise of their inner dialogue. They discovered what they called god, nowadays we just call it pure consciousness.Without all the ridiculous connotations the eons have stuck onto it.
      Of course it is Sabine her free will to choose not to master her only tool, and throw her scientific dogma out the window at the first opportunity
      (how come this reminds me of religious priests)
      And as thus be part of that cult that is destroying our planet, because it has not yet discovered that behind that ongoing rattle inside her skull, is a uniting Force, that shows anyone who tried it, that when we hurt another, we literally hurt ourselves.
      Also we discover that the more in tune with that Force, the less bound by those so called "laws of nature". There are layers of determinism.
      Ask yourselves why those religions have not managed to destroy earth in 5000 years and the science cult does this in 150 years.

  • @patriktschersich7502
    @patriktschersich7502 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    In the end it even doesn't matter if free will exists or not. Your life is how it is and you do the stuff you do. Just have fun living and do whatever ever you think is the best, no matter if it is deterministic predefined or randomly chosen at the moment, it doesn't make a difference. The intention and the reaction counts, not how you got there.
    And yes, I tell this that way because I also had my time where I realized, that free will might not exists. My guess is, that the chance free will can exist is 1/3. 1/3 eliminates the possibility because of a completely deterministic universe, which doesn't seem to be real and the other 1/3 would be in an absolutely undeterministic universe, which would have violated physics. In the last third free will would be possible but doesn't mean it has to be real. We might be just extremely complex but not completely unpredictable.

  • @josephjanitorius797
    @josephjanitorius797 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    As I get older, I'm realizing that the way I make decisions is almost one-to-one the way my father and mother made decisions, and that they also made decisions the way their parents did. Of course, all of them did this in their own way, yet the similarity in patterns is undeniable. But I don't know whether this has anything to do with your discussion of free will, or if your discussion simply sent my thought processes off onto another tangent typical of me.

  • @WasOne2
    @WasOne2 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +132

    I not only learn things from Sabine, I think that Sabine is hilarious. Great work. I have "decided"to keep listening regularly.

    • @davidparker9676
      @davidparker9676 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Germans are world renowned for their comedians.

    • @fredericklehoux7160
      @fredericklehoux7160 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      i think your reward center "decided" that probably because you are smart enough to have an interest in science.

    • @antonystringfellow5152
      @antonystringfellow5152 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@fredericklehoux7160
      I'm beginning to think that might be the sole reason for sentience - to create an agent that will respond to a reward system. In our case, the carrot and stick approach, delivered through emotions.

    • @davidparker9676
      @davidparker9676 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@dexterkrammer1089 Laugh: I command you!

    • @Gandhi_Physique
      @Gandhi_Physique 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yeah, she is funnier than many actual comedians imo. I don't see how some of these "funny" people get so big with their jokes that give me zero emotion other than wanting to turn it off.

  • @MrGriff305
    @MrGriff305 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    It definitely takes a lot of pressure off if my life decisions aren't mine. Maybe I'll just stop making decisions.

    • @godgetti
      @godgetti 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      or maybe you won't

    • @briantuk3000
      @briantuk3000 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      that's the contradiction with thiw view, is "stop making decisions" a decision in itself?

    • @MrGriff305
      @MrGriff305 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@briantuk3000 Yes. That will be the last decision. It was preordained 🤯

    • @sigigle
      @sigigle 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You can do that, you can even choose to try and become the most evil person who's ever existed.
      It won't be your fault if you do - it was always going to happen - but what it will mean is existence is revealing that the incarnation that your consciousness is inhabiting is one that was of low or even negative value, and it's always better for everyone including yourself if this is not the case, so you still have motivation to try and do better.

    • @briantuk3000
      @briantuk3000 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@MrGriff305 then this point of view is a contradiction, so it's invalid.

  • @Livingasfulfilledbeings
    @Livingasfulfilledbeings 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    People hate the idea that there not in control of their life. And to tell them that it’s not true well you’ll get some that accepts it and others who will fight to the very end to defend that they are.

  • @SimpletonSMan
    @SimpletonSMan หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I think a lot of people might be getting caught up on the will part and ignore the free part. It's like you said, of course we make decisions. We do have a will. But it's not free. It's predetermined by a bunch of factors. But for us humans in the day to day, it doesn't really make a difference. It only matters for bigger issues like climate change, as you pointed out.

    • @dirkbertels3872
      @dirkbertels3872 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I like your "We do have a will. But it's not free" - that actually makes the concept much clearer to me.

  • @christopherhall7560
    @christopherhall7560 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

    Had me at: "the ability to change the past, just by using their thoughts " brilliant.

    • @soulscanner66
      @soulscanner66 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      There's a word for that. It's called "lying".

    • @abc0to1
      @abc0to1 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      We cannot change physical phenomena that have occurred in the past, but we can change our interpretation of physical phenomena that have occurred in the past. However, this is not science, but philosophy.

    • @itsROMPERS...
      @itsROMPERS... 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@abc0to1 That's if the past actually IS made of physical phenomena that happened.
      A photo of you as a baby is only proof of a photo, not that you actually ever were a baby.
      The past not only could be completely made up, it was.

    • @abc0to1
      @abc0to1 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@itsROMPERS... It is true that the past in the everyday sense seems to be only in someone's mind. But on the other hand, we can see the stars of the distant past in the night sky in the "present. In other words, my present seems to contain someone else's past.
      If I understood the theory of relativity, we might have an interesting discussion about space-time.

    • @abc0to1
      @abc0to1 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@FranzSdoutz It is like the fable of the blind man touching the elephant. We can't change the past of touching part of an elephant, but we can change our perception of what we were touching.

  • @playgroundprotagonis
    @playgroundprotagonis 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    it's actually even worse; your neurocircuitry comes to a conclusion, and then some other neurocircuitry makes up a story about how you came to that conclusion, but you never actually know

    • @maiku20
      @maiku20 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Deeply confused explanation of the sort Dennett would give. If physics were all there is, then there would be no intensionality -- no "conclusions" to speak of, no "stories", and no "story"-makers. There would be merely matter moving in accordance with the physical laws with no awareness of anything.

    • @playgroundprotagonis
      @playgroundprotagonis 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@maiku20 why not? nothing in physics discounts consciousness

    • @maiku20
      @maiku20 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@playgroundprotagonis Nothing in physics assumes or relies on consciousness as part of its explanation. So Occam's razor removes consciousness as a thing.

    • @playgroundprotagonis
      @playgroundprotagonis 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@maiku20 but physics doesn't; physics doesn't have anything to say about consciousness (currently), it doesn't say anything for or against, occam's razor doesn't enter into it.

  • @douglaslawrence6580
    @douglaslawrence6580 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Wittgenstein died in 1951 but the graphic at 15:35 says 1939 and yes I can’t believe I noticed either

    • @douglaslawrence6580
      @douglaslawrence6580 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      1839 is when he became a UK citizen so a little like dying

  • @Etcher
    @Etcher 29 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I love how Sabine compares the free will question as "simple" when compared to what happens "in LHC collisions" 🙂

  • @leeluhbee
    @leeluhbee 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

    Fantastic video. As someone dealing with existential mental health issues my whole life, you learn early on in the therapeutic journey that we must see ourselves as observers of our thoughts without attaching to them. I like how you said you use your neural circuits and memories to make decisions. The past is determined so that means our new decisions are determined too. Thank you for touching on these subjects so conscientiously!

    • @IconoclastX
      @IconoclastX 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This will definently make things worse for you. I'm sorry you live in a culture that has manufactured a mental illness and you and tells you that you are a robot and a puppet with no objective worth. Sad times

  • @MiniDiaz1
    @MiniDiaz1 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    To understand why we make the choices that we do we would have to be aware of all the reasons we made our choices, which is simply maddening.
    Our brain keeps us from being aware of our breathing, heart beat, all the mechanical activities our bodies automatically do to keep us sane and focused on what we are focused on…it’s an adaptation that has helped us thrive

    • @chrisalex001
      @chrisalex001 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      The problem is that freewill has never been what this lady is describing. Freewill isn't the god-like ability to control space-time from the beginning to the end of our existence. Freewill is simply the ability to change direction of mind and body without any accountability to anything or anybody at any moment. Most human beings are prisoners of their mental patterns and physical habits too much to realize this. Only a truly sensitive mind would realize the true meaning of freewill. It's not about changing the game, but about playing differently. Only then do you truly realize what the game is all about. If you try to change it, you create something in opposition to what is already there, a reaction to it. Only by choosing how you play, are you able to understand what the game is actually doing.

    • @ongodddd
      @ongodddd หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      ⁠​⁠@@chrisalex001 i think you missed the point. The way you “play the game” you are describing is dictated by the causes, which you have no control over. The illusion of choice is just a reaction to the stimulus of these said causes. Everything that has ever happened has been cause and effect/action and reaction since the beginning of everything. As the saying goes, “it is what it is”.

    • @drockopotamus1
      @drockopotamus1 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@ongodddd Sounds like he understood the point just fine. He's saying that free will is a culmination of choice dictated by those causes (the game in his example). If a tragedy occurs, it won't be "oh well, it is what it is." The whole point is to equip everyone with the means to make the best decisions they can with what they have. The definition of free will is less important, not to mention highly subjective to begin with.

    • @carmenmccauley585
      @carmenmccauley585 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I am painfully aware of my irregular heartbeat.

    • @MiniDiaz1
      @MiniDiaz1 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@carmenmccauley585
      I’m sorry to hear that, must be exhausting
      Thank goodness you are you not aware of your kidneys filtering your blood, or the process of the spleen fighting off germs…that would be too much to handle

  • @tuneinandcalmout5890
    @tuneinandcalmout5890 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Loved the don't need to know anything thing if you're a TH-camr. Very drole and often true but totally inapplicable in your case Sabine as one of the very best and my personal favourite.

  • @andreasrumpf9012
    @andreasrumpf9012 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I don't believe in Sabine's free will either.

  • @SerbanCMusca-ut8ny
    @SerbanCMusca-ut8ny 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

    I'm so happy I discovered your chan! Your videos are always thought-provoking, thank you for that.

    • @heedmydemands
      @heedmydemands 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes very thought provoking indeed

  • @thelanavishnuorchestra
    @thelanavishnuorchestra 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +71

    I've had the definite sensation of being a passenger in my brain, that the whole free will thing was a useful illusion for day to day getting by, as long as you remember from time to time that your brain makes decisions and you then claim credit for them after the fact.

    • @christianbenesch1
      @christianbenesch1 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Or you bury and forget them and deny them after the fact.

    • @KaZoomRaider
      @KaZoomRaider 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      Or if your brain is making the decisions that you, after the fact claim or deny you made - who is this "you" which does so?

    • @stayontrack
      @stayontrack 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@KaZoomRaider exactly

    • @googlerudick
      @googlerudick 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@KaZoomRaider Bingo. That's the whole misunderstanding right there. A slave to one's own brain + you are your brain => You're a slave to yourself => you're free. But people don't accept that "the brain makes a choice" is "free will" so they confuse themselves.

    • @user-he1yb7pl1w
      @user-he1yb7pl1w 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      The question of free will is not even a question to ask. Your brain and body make decisions based on several factors, including feelings, environmental, and the past. You are simply watching the movie for the first time and seeing how it unfolds. There is nothing wrong with that, you just have to accept that is the way it is. With the temporal dimension you are forever moving towards the future and your decisions are always in the past. That is life, stop asking the question and just learn to enjoy life for what it is. :)

  • @Wilfoe
    @Wilfoe 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    This video was even more interesting than most of your videos. I love existential discussions! Personally, I believe that particles do have free will on some level, but your perspective sounds much more practical than mine.

    • @geosynchronous4386
      @geosynchronous4386 วันที่ผ่านมา

      We're not a particle but a combination of them with a human conscience. Free will in science isn't the same as our inner self free will. Our free will is what makes or brakes our inner self based on feelings, emotions, experiences, education and decisions based on those inputs which should prepare us for the upcoming decisions in the future. Just my thought on it. Free will is a freedom that is used and abused by many.

  • @ah1548
    @ah1548 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Sabine, I have the feeling you'd be somehow much more fun to go for a beer with than most of our contemporaries.

  • @newworldlord643
    @newworldlord643 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    LITERALLY keeled over at " and to be a youtuber you need to know NOTHING" classic and brilliantl humor, this my 1st time seeing you and i love u subbed and buying your book!! i love the brainy stuff!

    • @joeharker7918
      @joeharker7918 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Same here, that comment got me good. 😂

    • @feekygucker2678
      @feekygucker2678 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      samesies!

  • @kennethread5637
    @kennethread5637 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    Glad to see you are getting closer to that 1mil milestone in subscription. You deserve a lot more of course

  • @tokumeig654
    @tokumeig654 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I've been thinking about this my whole life and came up with exactly the same conclusion as Sabine - free will at a individual level is just the output of what the brain's algorithm churns out. I have a computer science background, and this is exactly like a function that returns an output with deterministic inputs plus some random elements in the calculation. Without the randomness, you would get the same result every time if the inputs are exactly the same. People are mistaken the randomness as free will - I am deciding what I want to eat for lunch, and thinking it's free will. But it's just some calculation based on past experiences plus randomness that gave the final result.

  • @ztlan22
    @ztlan22 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    We are witnessing an equation solving it self. No free will

  • @marksilbert7005
    @marksilbert7005 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +73

    "And that is why, if you want to become a TH-camr, you don't need to know anything." Sabine H. As always, your videos are always great. Sometimes, you even have great lines in them. Thank you for all your videos!

    • @ns88ster
      @ns88ster 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      She's always entertaining, and sometimes she's even right!

    • @TheNameOfJesus
      @TheNameOfJesus 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      She is the best TH-camr out there, but sometimes I don't learn a single thing, like today.

  • @ZubairKhan-sp8vb
    @ZubairKhan-sp8vb 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    You are just awesome genuinely, the work you do and the way you bring it out!
    There should be more people like you in our society.

  • @lindaniedringhaus8790
    @lindaniedringhaus8790 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    You don't have to know anything to be a TH-camr. Love it!!

  • @davianoinglesias5030
    @davianoinglesias5030 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    😅I love these sorts of discussions, unfortunately I have very few friends to discuss them with😔so its almost always online.

  • @lewistaylor1965
    @lewistaylor1965 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    My father was an academic...I never got chance to talk to him about the non existence of freewill...that revelation for me only happened after he died

    • @lgande11
      @lgande11 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "An object will retain it's course of action unless otherwise acted upon by another" because the assumption is " It cannot choose otherwise because it's internal processes are predetermined"...
      The reason we do not take the bullet or the gun to court for murder is because we know or are going to attempt to find the shooter .... so there ... kkkk
      Try telling that to your spouse when you deliberately forget her birthday but had earlier on wished your ... a happy birthday.... Good luck with the " I don't believe I have freewill thing ... lol

    • @IconoclastX
      @IconoclastX 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@lgande11they already know this bro. Thats why they want to destroy society, that is their ultimate goal

  • @taylankammer
    @taylankammer 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +43

    "If free will doesn't exist, it's never existed, so what difference could it possibly make for your life?" This is a *beautiful* line, and explains much more clearly an idea that I've had for a while, which I've generally tried to explain as follows, usually being met with confused looks: "It makes no sense to worry whether free will exists, because if it exists, you can stop worrying; and if it doesn't, then you can't control whether you will worry, so just don't!"
    The last part, "so just don't," may seem ironic. The thing is, you may not be able to "freely" choose whether to worry over it or not, but hopefully my words will influence you not to worry. There may be no free will, but the series of events beginning with the big bang has resulted in me becoming a person who behaves in such a way that I try to prevent people from wasting resources on useless worries, hence uttering those words in an attempt to influence others to stop worrying about something which they have no control over anyway!

    • @taylankammer
      @taylankammer 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      @Raúl Martínez Nope, it's just the series of events in my life up to now that make me do it. input > output ;-)

    • @ShadowManceri
      @ShadowManceri 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Saying someone not to worry has never worked and is one the worst piece of advice to give anyone who is actually worrying about something. It doesn't help but only sounds condescending like you are not taking their worries seriously or actually addressing and listening them.

    • @Alondro77
      @Alondro77 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I have so much free will that I can ALTER the will of others by IMPOSING my free will upon them! #GodEmperorAlondro2032 I AM THE UNIVERSE!!! >:D

    • @meleardil
      @meleardil 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I still think that it is extrapolation beyond the widest boundaries of our models. This happens every single time, when one branch of science has a "level of knowledge" achieved fully, giving the feeling of completeness. As natural, the conclusion is drawn that "well, we collected all that is there to know", and than wide speculations pop up stating the Ultimate Fate of the Universe or the Origin of Everything, the Final Answer, and so on.
      Ancient wisdom: the universe is infinite. I am more cautious with these Universal Revelations, no matter how tempting they are.

    • @kevind6425
      @kevind6425 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      If we can control our thoughts we can find free will, but it's not native. When we find free will then we can plan to carry it with us wherever we go. 😊

  • @dan339dan
    @dan339dan หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    As a programmer, it's my nature to work with "functions" in the programming sense: input, processing, output. I see no difference whether it's a biological machine making decisions or a sophisticated enough AI. I believe all my characteristics are the results of the genes I inherited and largely the environment I grew up in. If time would rewind and I were put through the same experiences again, I wouldn't have made different decisions. And based on these previous experiences, I make my future decisions. If I got food poisoning from a restaurant, I would avoid it next time, probably no matter how many times time has rewind and have me go through the experience again.
    To put simply, humans are just like the current deep neural networks, or that deep neural networks are modeled after biology. We are constantly learning and constantly making calculations based on past experiences to arrive at a decision. If anyone can write down this decision function, we can't have free will because then it will be deterministic. This is what I've always believed in.

  • @SouthernGuardian
    @SouthernGuardian หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    If someone is truly a materialist, they cannot believe in free will.

    • @CosmicHyperborean
      @CosmicHyperborean 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      Fortunately, materialism isn’t our only reality.

    • @nathanwiles2719
      @nathanwiles2719 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      @SouthernGuardian I'm a materialist that believes in free will. People seem to have this belief that when your understanding changes as to the underlying mechanism of a thing, we have to discount the thing entirely. For example, someone might argue that because we now know touch to be the sensation of electromagnetic repulsion, there is no such thing as touch. It's a pedantic line of reasoning, and it's just as pedantic to discount the concept of free will just because we now know better how it works.

    • @snowthemegaabsol6819
      @snowthemegaabsol6819 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      this is metaphorically referred to as throwing the baby out with the bathwater. An absurd thing to even say

    • @charleslegates9231
      @charleslegates9231 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      ​​​@@nathanwiles2719 free will denial isn't about denying the capacity for humans to make decisions, but the idea that this human in this state and context will always make the exact same decision; that is, you are physically deterministic

    • @nathanwiles2719
      @nathanwiles2719 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@charleslegates9231 I understand that. We now understand free will to be a deterministic/physicalist/materialist (take your pick) process, but that doesn't mean that we are now required to say it doesn't exist. Again, we just understand better now how it works.

  • @davebellamy4867
    @davebellamy4867 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +91

    As someone who suffers from indecision, I find this an absolute win.

    • @lioneljaftha3473
      @lioneljaftha3473 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Instant success. You just made a snap decision. Well done.

    • @peacemakernana
      @peacemakernana 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      You just got an excuse to continue behaving the way you've always have...lol

    • @IconoclastX
      @IconoclastX 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@peacemakernanathats what this is always about. Thats what leftism is, its an exscuse, a subtle whispher in the ear, a good reason to be a bad person. Theirs always some good reason: "I'm really a puppet with no free will so its ok" "Eve made me eat the apple". Nothing under the sun is new

    • @morganmiller7777
      @morganmiller7777 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Indecision would never exist if there were no level of will involved

  • @SpriteGuard
    @SpriteGuard 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I think that often when people talk about free will, they're actually talking about moral responsibility, but doing so indirectly, because there's an assumption that "no free will" implies "no moral responsibility." I don't think that's the case. Even without free will, we are still morally responsible.

    • @olbluelips
      @olbluelips 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I agree

    • @Lilitha11
      @Lilitha11 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I think most people talking about the topic are confused in general. For example, when you think about it free will has to be deterministic, since you as a person are determining your actions. You are a physical object in reality, so where is the controversy?

    • @olbluelips
      @olbluelips 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Lilitha11 I like this viewpoint. It seems like you could consider free will as the SOURCE of determinism. Just because we identify with these determinations doesn't mean they aren't determinations. Even when you consider quantum outcomes, does it really make sense to say you could have measured a different outcome?

  • @BrotherCheng
    @BrotherCheng หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    One important aspect of the lack of free will (I agree with the video, btw) is that even if you lack free will, it doesn't just mean other people can just build a machine that completely predicts your decisions 100% and take advantage of it. Think about it, if you know about such a machine, if the machine predicts you will eat a banana, you will instead eat an apple; if it thinks you want an apple, you just eat a banana. Now you have free will… right?? Not really, because that machine would not have worked to begin with.
    Say we live in a deterministic universe, in theory we can build a computer that completely simulates the universe and be able to tell the future; but now the problem arises that we can use the results of that computer program to change the future, rendering its calculations incorrect. The reason why this contradiction can't exist is that this computer program will end up having to simulate itself (since the computer is part of the universe), leading to an infinite loop and never generating a result. As such, predicting the future only works if the computer lives outside the universe and cannot affect it. Along the same token, someone/some machine can only 100% predict your thoughts if their prediction have absolutely no way of affecting you, which can't be the case in the real world.
    The religious folks can think of that outside-universe-computer as god, or we can just ignore it. Either way, whether you have free will or not, it's not like it *really* matters in a practical manner and it doesn't mean someone can just use that as an excuse to say "oh life has no point anymore".

    • @smeeself
      @smeeself หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      👍

  • @dastutweh
    @dastutweh 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Although our will is not free, but the product of all the lines of events in the universe within the local time horizon, it can hardly be controlled from outside and only to a limited extent from within. We obviously have a very idiosyncratic, unfree will.

  • @pmusman
    @pmusman 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    You say you are not a philosopher, but you are often helping me to understand more of the world and myself. Danke :-)

  • @butterfacemcgillicutty
    @butterfacemcgillicutty 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

    This is easily one of the best science channels on youtube, one of the best Pysics channels - I very much like how when you end up past physics and into philosophy not only do you recognize it you know your stuff about other philosophers!

    • @Cryptech1010
      @Cryptech1010 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Its is hard to understand her accent so it's hard for me to get into it, and she also speaks fast so it's hard to follow even with subtitles

    • @michaelsmith4904
      @michaelsmith4904 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      interesting... i watch most videos at 2x, only slowing it down when the accent makes it hard to understand. form instance, some british accents i have to slow it down to 1.8 or 1.6. i think Sabine does enunciate very well so perhaps that is why i can undetstand her at 2x.

    • @kayakMike1000
      @kayakMike1000 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I love when she does these topics. You can hear her frustration about topics that aren't scientific. She says I am a scientist, I ain't got time for that.

  • @Mars_architects_bali
    @Mars_architects_bali หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    There is a rather popular solution among neuroscientists for the quandary determinism poses (to some) which she didn’t mention, which is the illusion of free will as a byproduct of the mind and indeed its intrinsic complexity .. works for me

  • @untruelie2640
    @untruelie2640 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    I agree with everything you said in this video. However, I think the problem of free will is of a slightly different nature (depending on the definition of "free will" of course, but that's always the case with everything). You spoke of the different scopes and languages that disciplines use, concerning different levels of emergent properties. I think the conflict between physicist's determinism and philosopher's indeterminism (or the insistence that there is something like free will even if that means that somehow quantum particles are supposed to have a free will too) comes from different ways the two disciplines approach the problem of how the human mind works. Philosophers start to look at phenomena of the mind itself, complex results of brain functions if you will, and try to go back to the most elementary level to find out how they work. This approach often leads to the conclusion that there has to be some kind of free will. On the other hand (and this is my subjective interpretation), physicists start to look at elementary particles and work their way up to find out how new properties emerge on higher levels of complexity. This apparently tends to lead to the conclusion that everything has to be deterministic, ultimately including the human mind. The physicist approach is that everything is ultimately a large equasion, while the philosophic approach is that the human mind possesses a non-reducable complexity beneath which every discussion is more or less futile.
    So I think the real problem is that we are not able to completely harmonize those two approaches. Between elementary physics and neural biology there seems to exist some sort of deterministic continuum, but there is a gap between our understanding of neural functions and our understanding of mental phenomena as philosophers see them. Perhaps we will be able to bridge this gap in the future, but this still would leave us with the problem of different approaches and logics of argumentation.
    So my conclusion from this would be: Everything in the universe is ultimately determined in some way or another, but that doesn't mean that there is no free will for us humans. It's just not the universal, independent free will that libertarians talk about. Perhaps one could call it a kind of "blurryness" resulting from our inability to combine the different approaches and levels of emergent properties into one great theory of the human mind that would enable us to understand everything about our thoughts. In terms of everyday life, and in terms of systematically dealing with phenomena of the human mind, we might as well assume the existence of a free will, because we can't, as the Wittgenstein quote you brought up says, practically predict the result of a thought process or decision before it happened. So one could say that our minds are deterministic, but not determined.
    (There might be the hypothetical possibility that a very advanced supercomputer could correctly calculate the outcome of a human thought or decision process before it actually happens but then we have the problem that it probably wouldn't be able to compute its own calculation process because that would require an even more complex computer, leading to an infinite regress. So from all that I can tell, we will probably never get rid of this "blurryness").
    One final note: I think some philosophers, myself not excluded, tend to get a bit too defensive when confronted with physicists or biologists dealing with this kind of question. They might be under the impression that the other disciplines are encroaching on their territory or that they want to take away philosophy's right to exist. While every scientist probably thinks that his discipline is the most interesting and important, I also think that every discipline has its right to exist. As I said, it's a matter of different approaches, and the "philosophy of the mind" can tell us many things that neural biology or physics can't, not to mention the parts of philosophy that deal with normativity (like ethics or political theory).

    • @krishna48ch
      @krishna48ch 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Thank you for taking the time to write this beautiful hypothesis. My thoughts connect with it hand in glove.

    • @untruelie2640
      @untruelie2640 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@krishna48ch Thank you for your kind words.

    • @didack1419
      @didack1419 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The point to have a definition of free will is to ground moral responsibility which is needed for law, beyond that, there's no fact of the matter about if "free will" exists if you establish that you are trying to ground your intuition of what the word should mean in some kind of real neurological process. It will entirely depend on how you decide to do that.
      The other thing is that lay people intuitively understand the idea of "free will" as having the ability to choose one thing or another in a counterfactual sense, but we know that that's an illusion because there's very little room to the idea of having had the ability to choose something different from what you chose. People typically change their definition and intuition of free will after they thought enough about it to realise that the basic libertarian idea is physically untrue and even logically incoherent for their definition of "choosing freely", so the phrasing "free will doesn’t exist" means the same for most people, it means "you never had the ability to have chosen otherwise, and you never will".

    • @untruelie2640
      @untruelie2640 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@didack1419 Your first point about moral responsibility is certainly true, but that doesn't mean that that is the only basis for the concept of free will. This would be very problematic, because it would mean to base a descriptive concept on a normative need. In other words, we can't just say that X exists because we wish for it to exist. There has to be more than that to justify the concept, otherwise we are just making things up and that's not the goal in the philosophy of the mind.
      This brings me to your second point: Why is the ability to make a decision an illusion? You say that "there is very little room to the idea of having had the ability to choose something different than you chose", but that's a self-contradiction. A choice requires that there are at least two options. If there is no possible other outcome, then there would be no choice, no decision process, everything would just flow in a stream of actions. And while it certainly looks that way from a purely physical perspective, it's not the only thing that goes on here. The crucial factor here is the ability to reflect upon our thoughts and actions, to judge them and to evaluate their possible effects. Take this example: You want to decide wether to quit your job or not. Then your mind goes through this reflection process. Of course one could argue that the outcome is already determined, but that's only possible with hindsight, so there is a path-dependency problem. If you choose to quit, then an observer could say, "It was always determined that you would quit, there was no real decision." And if you don't quit, the observer could say the same. Once the choice has been made, the outcome is certain and then it was of course the "only possible outcome" because, to use a tautology, if it had been different, it would be different. But again, that's only possible in hindsight, in the present moment itself, the outcome is not certain. It only becomes certain (and thus determinated) to us once it has been made. "To us" I say, because that's the important part, the "blurryness" I was talking about in my previous comment. A perfect computer could remove all uncertainty and variables, but that's not within the ability of our brains. Objectively speaking, all our decisions are deterministic, but subjectively they are not determined. That's why I said that before, deterministic, but not determined. So for all relevant purposes, we do indeed have the ability to choose between options. And it doesn't really matter wether we take this decision "consciously" or "subconsciously", wether it's this or that string of neurons that's activated. Important is that we are able to reflect about it within the frame of our own minds, because ultimately everything happens within the frame of our own minds, the whole world in the way we perceive it (according to Kant's epistemology).
      Of course you can say now that I just relativised the problem and that I changed the definition of free will just as you said in your last point, but isn't that how all science works? If we come to the conclusion that our definition of quantum particles doesn't fit our observations, we have to change it. It's the same with philosophical definitions. The strictly libertarian definition of free will does not fit our empirical knowledge anymore, so we have to leave it behind. I see no problem with that.

    • @jonasp.1830
      @jonasp.1830 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@didack1419 I think this whole thing becomes even more interesting when you frame it through an evolutionary lense with biology, "what is the advantage of making decisions", the answer is pretty obvious making a "good" decision can make you pass your genes more often. A single cell organism who can determine where light is coming from has now more information then one who dosnt have that ability and will then outcompeted by the former over time. More and more complex Information leads to the need of better ways to sort that information and retain it which leads to the evolution of complexer and bigger nervous systems. This doesnt help deciding the question what "is there free will" because it doesnt answer the definition question here but i do think it helps us reframe the thing that a "decision" is, an evaluation of innformation by a network of neurons and the output it produces, now is that output predetermined by the balance of hormons in our cells, which is determined by genes in those cells, which are made of molecules which are made of quantum particel? I guess so? So in my opinion free will is the point where complexity reaches the point where an orginism has to make the best decision for itself by sorting the data it has to the best of its ability, but i can understand if that is not the enough of an explenation for some people.

  • @buonq
    @buonq 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    The lack of free will does not preclude the "sense of agency" (as the psychologists call it), which refers to our inner ability to make decisions.

    • @buonq
      @buonq 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@michaelenquist3728 Making decision co-occurs with a subjective feeling of agency, "I am the one who decides". However it might be (and this is the point of debate), dissociated from the actual causality. Such dissociations were observed in the experimental studies with split-brain subjects.

    • @TheVeganVicar
      @TheVeganVicar 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​ @minimal
      🐟 11. FREE-WILL Vs DETERMINISM:
      Just as the autonomous beating of one’s heart is governed by one’s genes (such as the presence of a congenital heart condition), and the present-life conditioning of the heart (such as myocardial infarction as a consequence of the consumption of excessive fats and oils, or heart palpitations due to severe emotional distress), each and EVERY thought and action is governed by our genes and our environmental milieu.
      This teaching is possibly the most difficult concept for humans to accept, because we refuse to believe that we are not the authors of our own thoughts and actions. From the appearance of the pseudo-ego (one’s inaccurate conception of oneself) at the age of approximately two and a half, we have been constantly conditioned by our parents, teachers, and society, to believe that we are solely responsible for our thoughts and deeds. This deeply-ingrained belief is EXCRUCIATINGLY difficult to abandon, which is possibly the main reason why there are very few humans extant who are spiritually-enlightened, or at least who are liberated from the five manifestations of mental suffering explained elsewhere in this “Final Instruction Sheet for Humanity”, since suffering (as opposed to mere pain) is predicated solely upon the erroneous belief in free-will.
      Free-will is usually defined as the ability for a person to make a conscious decision to do otherwise, that is to say, CHOOSE to have performed an action other than what one has already done, if one had been given the opportunity to do so. To make it perfectly clear, if, for example, one is handed a restaurant menu with several dishes listed, one could decide that one dish is equally as desirable the next dish, and choose either option. If humans truly possessed freedom of will, then logically speaking, a person who adores cats and detests dogs, ought to be able to suddenly switch their preferences at any given point in time, or to be hair-splitting, even voluntarily pause the beating of his or her own heart!
      So, in both of the above examples, there is a pre-existing preference for one particular dish or pet. Even if one liked cats and dogs “EQUALLY”, and one was literally forced to choose one over the other, that choice would not be truly independent, but based entirely upon one’s genetic sequence, plus one’s up-to-date conditioning. Actual equality is non-existent in the macro-phenomenal sphere. If one was to somehow return to the time when any particular decision was made, the exact same decision would again be made, as all the circumstances would be identical!
      The most common argument against fatalism or determinism is that humans, unlike other animals, have the ability to choose what they can do, think or feel. First of all, many species of (higher) mammals also make choices. For instance, a cat can see two birds and choose which of the two birds to prey upon, or choose whether or not to play with a ball that is thrown its way, depending on its conditioning (e.g. its mood). That choices are made is indisputable, but those choices are dependent ENTIRELY upon one’s genes and one’s conditioning. There is no third factor involved on the phenomenal plane. On the noumenal level, thoughts and deeds are in accordance with the preordained “Story of Life”.
      Read previous chapters of “F.I.S.H” to understand how life is merely a DREAM in the “Mind of the Divine” and that human beings are, essentially, that Divinity in the form of dream characters. Chapter 08, specifically, explains how actions performed in the present are the result of chains of causation, all the way back to the earliest-known event in our apparently-real universe (the so-called “Big Bang” singularity).
      At this point, it should be noted that according to reputable geneticists, it is possible for genes to mutate during the lifetime of any particular person. However, that phenomenon would be included under the “conditioning” aspect, since the genes mutate according to whatever conditioning is imposed upon the human organism. It is simply IMPOSSIBLE for a person to use sheer force of will to change their own genetic code. Essentially, “conditioning” includes everything that acts upon a person from conception unto death, and over which there is no control.
      University studies in recent years have demonstrated, by the use of hypnosis and complex experimentation, that CONSCIOUS volition is either unnecessary for a decision to be enacted upon or (in the case of hypnotic testing) that free-will choices are completely superfluous to actions. Because scientific research into free-will is a recent field of enquiry, it is recommended that the reader search online for the latest findings. I contend, however, that indeterminacy is a purely philosophical conundrum. I am highly-sceptical in relation to freedom of volition being either demonstrated or disproven by neuroscience, because even if free-will was proven by cognitive science, it would not take into account the ultimate cause of that free-will existing in the first place. The origin of that supposed freedom of volition would need to be established.
      If any particular volitional act was not caused by the sum of all antecedent states of being, then the only alternative explanation would be due to true RANDOMNESS. Many quantum physicists construe that subatomic particles can arbitrarily move in space, but true randomness is problematic in any possible universe, what to speak of in a closed, deterministic universe. Just as the typical person believes that the collision of two motor vehicles was the result of pure chance (hence the term “accident”), physicists are unable to see that the seeming unpredictability of quantum events are, in fact, determined by a force hitherto undiscovered by the material sciences. It is a known fact of logic that a random number generator cannot exist, since no computational machine or software programme is able to make the “decision” to generate a number capriciously. Any number generated will be a consequence of human programming, which in turn, is the result of genetic programming, etc.
      True randomness implies that there were no determinants whatsoever in the making of a conscious decision or the execution of an act of will.
      Neither did we choose which deoxyribonucleic acid our biological parents bequeathed to us, nor most all the conditions to which we were exposed throughout our lives, yet we somehow believe that we are fully-autonomous beings, with the ability to feel, think and behave as we desire. The truth is, we cannot know for certain what even our next thought will be. Do we DECIDE to choose our thoughts and deeds? Not likely. Does an infant choose to learn how to walk or to begin speaking, or does it just happen automatically, according to nature? Obviously, the toddler begins to walk and to speak according to its genes (some children are far more intelligent and verbose, and more agile than others, depending on their genetic sequence) and according to all the conditions to which he or she has been exposed so far (some parents begin speaking to their kids even while they are in the womb, or expose their offspring to highly-intellectual dialogues whilst still in the cradle).
      Those who believe in free-will ought to be challenged with the following experiment: at five o’clock tomorrow afternoon, for one hour, think of nothing but blue butterflies. If anyone can pass such a test, then they must be one in a billion, and even so, that does not substantiate free-will, but merely evidence that they have learnt to focus their mind on a level far beyond the average person, due solely to their genes and their conditioning. When an extraneous thought appears within that hour, as will inevitably occur, from where does that thought arise? Think about it! If we are truly the authors of our own mentation, then from where does our INITIAL thought or our first dream arise whilst we are still in the womb? If we did not consciously generate our very first thought, why do we assume that any of our proceeding thoughts are freely-produced?
      Even those decisions/choices that we seem to make are entirely predicated upon our genes and our conditioning, and cannot be free in any sense of the word. To claim that one is the ULTIMATE creator of one’s thoughts and actions is tantamount to believing that one created one’s very being! If a computer program or artificially-intelligent robot considered itself to be the cause of its activity, it would seem absurd to the average person. Yet, that is precisely what virtually every person who has ever lived mistakenly believes of their own thoughts and deeds!
      Cont...

  • @hughhunt1800
    @hughhunt1800 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Oh Sabine...you may not be a psychologist or philosopher, but your comedy is superb. You're a superb professor also 😊

  • @allanyork244
    @allanyork244 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I was taught that one can never prove anything only disprove

  • @suulix4065
    @suulix4065 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

    “If free will doesn’t exist, then it never existed in the first place, so why does it matter?” will hold a firm grip on my perspective for a while 😆 Thanks so much for the video!! ✌️ 😁

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      You can try this argument in traffic court next time when they ask you to pay a fine for a moving violation. Please report to us how it went. ;-)

    • @smeeself
      @smeeself 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@schmetterling4477🙄

    • @Anonymous-df8it
      @Anonymous-df8it 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@smeeself ???

    • @anonymousman1282
      @anonymousman1282 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      ​​@@schmetterling4477the statement is true (most probably) but it cant be used as an argument. Going to jail in such a case would also be pre determined.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@anonymousman1282 It is also pre-determined that most people who talk about determinism in physics are clueless about physics. ;-)