It’s all about the physical components. Not having free will feels like sleep paralysis; it’s a disconnection from your muscles.
Have you ever been playing an immersive video game, for example a story-driven FPS, and become completely used to looking around, moving etc. with the controls; and then hit a point where the developers take that control away to do something narrative? Suddenly your head turns to look at something and you didn’t tell it to? The fraction of a second of vertigo and confusion, before you remember you’re playing a game? That’s no-free-will.
Feeling unable to complete thoughts I would like to think through, as if someone censored them
I can’t make sense of this one. How would you even tell? You can’t have an endless tower of meta-thoughts monitoring the first thought to see if it halted.
I’ve had the subjective experience of feeling unable to complete thoughts I would like to think through, mostly as a consequence of post-traumatic stress.
It most often manifests as something like “A, therefore B, therefore C, therefore oh look a bird!” repeating over and over, along with an intuitive feeling that all the aborted chains are pointing roughly in the same direction. It sometimes manifests as “A, therefore NOT B” in cases where if I abstract over the particulars sufficiently it’s obvious that A → B, and I can’t figure out why on earth I concluded NOT B in any particular instance. (Often followed by “A, therefore NOT B” in the particular instance again.)
I typically describe both of those experiences as my mind skittering off the surface of a thought rather than engaging with it, though the actual experience isn’t kinesthetic like that at all.
That said, I don’t experience any of that as being at all related to the sensation of “free will” the OP is talking about.
This points at the question of how much free will do people who believe in free will think they have? There might be a difference between free will and omnipotence about one’s thoughts and decisions.
It’s all about the physical components. Not having free will feels like sleep paralysis; it’s a disconnection from your muscles.
Have you ever been playing an immersive video game, for example a story-driven FPS, and become completely used to looking around, moving etc. with the controls; and then hit a point where the developers take that control away to do something narrative? Suddenly your head turns to look at something and you didn’t tell it to? The fraction of a second of vertigo and confusion, before you remember you’re playing a game? That’s no-free-will.
I can’t make sense of this one. How would you even tell? You can’t have an endless tower of meta-thoughts monitoring the first thought to see if it halted.
I’ve had the subjective experience of feeling unable to complete thoughts I would like to think through, mostly as a consequence of post-traumatic stress.
It most often manifests as something like “A, therefore B, therefore C, therefore oh look a bird!” repeating over and over, along with an intuitive feeling that all the aborted chains are pointing roughly in the same direction. It sometimes manifests as “A, therefore NOT B” in cases where if I abstract over the particulars sufficiently it’s obvious that A → B, and I can’t figure out why on earth I concluded NOT B in any particular instance. (Often followed by “A, therefore NOT B” in the particular instance again.)
I typically describe both of those experiences as my mind skittering off the surface of a thought rather than engaging with it, though the actual experience isn’t kinesthetic like that at all.
That said, I don’t experience any of that as being at all related to the sensation of “free will” the OP is talking about.
This points at the question of how much free will do people who believe in free will think they have? There might be a difference between free will and omnipotence about one’s thoughts and decisions.
Yikes. Another thing I hadn’t realised could actually happen in real life.
I don’t remember that, but I do remember gorging my character on food because I was hungry.
Took me a minute to figure that one out.