Free Capitalist Network - Community Archive
Mises Community Archive
An online community for fans of Austrian economics and libertarianism, featuring forums, user blogs, and more.

Is free will required for a Misean praxology?

rated by 0 users
Not Answered This post has 0 verified answers | 7 Replies | 5 Followers

Top 500 Contributor
Male
268 Posts
Points 5,220
SirThinkALot posted on Tue, Oct 26 2010 12:07 AM

I'm not sure if this is really an economic question but here goes:

 

I was having this conversation with a friend the other day, he said that because Mises assumed free will throughout his work, one cant be a determinist and accept his economic ideas. 

 

But I wonder is that really the case?  It seems to me that even if Mises did believe in free will(can anybody confirm/deny this?), his ideas arent incompatable with determinism, after all couldnt a determinist Misean say that humans act purposefully(rationally) without necessarly acting freely?  Or is there something about MIses's ideas that I'm missing? 

 

I'd be especially interested to hear from determinists on this board. 

OBJECTION!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

If you preface everything you say with the phrase 'studies have shown...' people will believe anything you say no matter how ridiculous. Studies have shown this works 87.64% of the time.
  • | Post Points: 80

All Replies

Top 50 Contributor
Male
2,687 Posts
Points 48,995

Strangely, I had a similar discussion tonight at the Monday Mises Group I attend.  I argued that we do have free will, but I don't know enough about the determinist view.

I'm not sure if this is related at all, but how does the fact that we always choose the most rational action factor into the concept of free will?

  • | Post Points: 20
Not Ranked
11 Posts
Points 145

 

Here is what you tell your friend. First, however, make sure they are sitting down and don't have any major medical conditions because this is going to blow their mind!

The way that determinism manifests itself through human action IS THE DEFINITION of free will!

Basically, even if everything in the universe is determined that doesn't necessarily mean that it is known ahead of time. It is entirely possible that the universe itself doesn't know how things will turn out. So each decision you make is done in real time, and there'd be no way to prove or disprove that you were in fact going to do what you in fact did.

I guess you can think of determinism a couple of different ways. One way is to interpret it as saying everything is "predetermined", whatever that means. Another way is that if you were able to re-setup the universe EXACTLY the same way, then everything would proceed to happen the same way it did last time. I find the second insight more interesting because if it is IMPOSSIBLE to re-setup the universe exactly then determinism is essentially meaningless from our point of view. It would still be an important fact of reality because it, among other things, makes science possible but it would be of no consequence to the analysis of human action.

It gets even more interesting if we posit "Groundhog Day" scenarios. Let's say the universe is reset at the beginning of each day exactly as it was yesterday, EXCEPT one person (you) got to keep your memories. This seemingly insignificant change would in fact have huge ramifications for the outcome of the day. Not only would you make seemingly all new decisions, but you would cause other people to make new decisions due to your interactions. This would ripple outward and very quickly cause everything to happen differently. Granted, theoretically, it could all be "predetermined", but for all intents and purposes, THAT IS FREE WILL.

Total deposit: 2¢

  • | Post Points: 20
Top 500 Contributor
Male
345 Posts
Points 7,035
Jesse replied on Tue, Oct 26 2010 1:46 AM

SirThinkALot:

But I wonder is that really the case?  It seems to me that even if Mises did believe in free will(can anybody confirm/deny this?), his ideas arent incompatable with determinism, after all couldnt a determinist Misean say that humans act purposefully(rationally) without necessarly acting freely?  Or is there something about MIses's ideas that I'm missing? 

 

Mises discusses determinism and free will in chapter 5 of Theory and History. You really should read it. (Not to give anything away, but if you read this chapter, you'll see that Mises was a determinist.)

I Samuel 8

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 500 Contributor
Male
345 Posts
Points 7,035
Jesse replied on Tue, Oct 26 2010 2:04 AM

Jonathan M. F. Catalán:

I'm not sure if this is related at all, but how does the fact that we always choose the most rational action factor into the concept of free will?

Our choices always reflect our values, beliefs, and preferences. In this sense our choices are always rational. Insofar as our values, beliefs, and preferences are enjoined upon us by factors from the "outside world", then our choices are causally determined by these factors. However, as Misesians, we know that human action is the "ultimate given" of the social sciences; and therefore it impossible to speculate about the nature of whatever it is that lies behind human action. Whether this 'something' has a relationship with our actions in a way that determines them; we may never know.

Mises, however, argues (in a very Kantian way) that assuming causal determinism is a necessary prerequisite for epistemology.

Mises:

The logical structure of his mind enjoins upon man determinism and the category of causality. As man sees it, whatever happens in the universe is the necessary evolution of forces, powers, and qualities which were already present in the initial stage of the X out of which all things stem. All things in the universe are interconnected, and all changes are the effects of powers inherent in things. No change occurs that would not be the necessary consequence of the preceding state. All facts are dependent upon and conditioned by their causes. No deviation from the necessary course of affairs is possible. Eternal law regulates everything.

In this sense determinism is the epistemological basis of the human search for knowledge. Man cannot even conceive the image of an undetermined universe. In such a world there could not be any awareness of material things and their changes. It would appear a senseless chaos. Nothing could be identified and distinguished from anything else. Nothing could be expected and predicted. In the midst of such an environment man would be as helpless as if spoken to in an unknown language. No action could be designed, still less put into execution. Man is what he is because he lives in a world of regularity and has the mental power to conceive the relation of cause and effect.

I Samuel 8

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 25 Contributor
Male
4,922 Posts
Points 79,590

Robbie Six:
Here is what you tell your friend. First, however, make sure they are sitting down and don't have any major medical conditions because this is going to blow their mind!

The way that determinism manifests itself through human action IS THE DEFINITION of free will!

Basically, even if everything in the universe is determined that doesn't necessarily mean that it is known ahead of time. It is entirely possible that the universe itself doesn't know how things will turn out. So each decision you make is done in real time, and there'd be no way to prove or disprove that you were in fact going to do what you in fact did.

I guess you can think of determinism a couple of different ways. One way is to interpret it as saying everything is "predetermined", whatever that means. Another way is that if you were able to re-setup the universe EXACTLY the same way, then everything would proceed to happen the same way it did last time. I find the second insight more interesting because if it is IMPOSSIBLE to re-setup the universe exactly then determinism is essentially meaningless from our point of view. It would still be an important fact of reality because it, among other things, makes science possible but it would be of no consequence to the analysis of human action.

It gets even more interesting if we posit "Groundhog Day" scenarios. Let's say the universe is reset at the beginning of each day exactly as it was yesterday, EXCEPT one person (you) got to keep your memories. This seemingly insignificant change would in fact have huge ramifications for the outcome of the day. Not only would you make seemingly all new decisions, but you would cause other people to make new decisions due to your interactions. This would ripple outward and very quickly cause everything to happen differently. Granted, theoretically, it could all be "predetermined", but for all intents and purposes, THAT IS FREE WILL.

This.  Basically the idea is that "free will" and "determinism" can be defined in such ways as to make them compatible with one another.  If one defines "determinism" the way Wikipedia does, then "free will" can be defined as something like "the apparent indeterminism/unpredictability of something due to the inability to predict (in terms of calculation) its future state(s)".

Now why do humans appear unpredictable if everything follows immutable physical laws?  Well, humans are made up of a whole lot of the basic pieces of existence -- quarks, leptons, etc.  These combine to form atoms, which combine to form molecules, which combine to form cells, etc.  Given strict determinism, the future state of a human being is inextricably bound to the combination of all the states of the particles which compose him.  The amount of information that all these particles' states represent when put together is far too large for any human mind to compute.  Hence, the appearance of free will.

It may not even be possible to predict anything with absolute certainty* given the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.  This doesn't mean the universe is indeterminate -- it only means that our ability to calculate cannot be perfectly (infinitely!) precise.  Actually, the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle isn't even needed to demonstrate that.  Whenever a digital calculation using a transcendental number is made, it's necessarily imprecise to some degree, because transcendental numbers cannot be completely represented by a finite number of digits (at least, not to our knowledge).

So essentially, free will arises out of determinism because the gulf between the laws of the universe and human behavior is so vast.

* Note: I consider the phrase "predict... with absolute certainty" to be a pleonasm, as I define "predict' such that "absolute certainty" is implied.

The keyboard is mightier than the gun.

Non parit potestas ipsius auctoritatem.

Voluntaryism Forum

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 25 Contributor
Male
4,249 Posts
Points 70,775

Mises addressed determinism in Human Action.

Gist of his argument: Let's look at the principle of scientific induction for amoment. It's full of holes philosophically, claiming that if something happens many times without exception, then it will keep on happening. The only reason it's used every single day by all scientists is because it works.

Similarly, assuming people have free will, though possibly full of holes philosophically, works in practice. It is as sound a principle as scientific induction for arriving at truths and predictions.

OK, lemme see if I can find the chapter and verse. Yep, Pages 23 and 24. I'll try to copy it. Translation into English, as well as looking up the big words like panphysicalism, is the job of the reader.

"Mechanicalism proves to be so
satisfactory  a  principle  of  conduct  that  people  finally  believe  it
capable of solving all the problems of  thought and scientific research.
Materialism and  panphysicalism proclaim mechanicalism  as  the  es-
sence  of  all  knowledge  and  the  experimental  and  mathematical
methods of  the natural sciences as  the sole scientific mode of  think-
ing. All changes are to be  comprehended  as  motions subject to the
laws of mechanics.
The champions of mechanicalism do not bother about the still un-
solved  problems  of  the  logical  and  epistemological  basis  of  the
principles  of  causality and imperfect induction. In  their  eyes these
principles are sound because they work. The fact that experiments in
the laboratory bring about the results predicted by the theories and
that machines in the factories run in the way predicted by technology
proves, they say, the soundness of  the methods and findings of modern

natural science. Granted that science cannot give us  truth-and  who
knows  what  truth really means?-at  any rate  it is  certain  that  it
works in leading us  to success.
But  it  is precisely when we accept  this pragmatic point  of  view
that  the  emptiness of  the panphysicalist  dogma  becomes manifest.
Science, as  has been poinfed out above, has not succeeded in solving
the problems  of  the mind-body  relations. The panphysicalists cer-
tainly cannot contend that the procedures they recommend have ever
worked in the field of  interhuman relations and of  the social sciences.
But it is beyond doubt that the principle according to which an Ego
deals with every human being as if  the other were a thinking and act-
ing being like himself has evidenced its usefulness both in mundane life
and in scientific research. It cannot be denied that it works.
lt is beyond doubt that the practice of  considering fellow men as
beings who think and act as  I, the Ego, do has  turned out well; on
the other hand the prospect seems hopeless of  getting a similar prag-
matic verification for the postulate requiring  them  to be  treated  in
the same manner as the objects of  the natural sciences. The epistemo-
logical problems raised  by  the comprehension of  other people's be-
havior are no  less  intricate  than  those  of  causality  and  incomplete
induction.  It may be admitted that it is impossible  to provide  con-
clusive evidence for the propositions that my logic is  the logic of  all
other people and by all means absolutely the only human logic and
that the categories of my action are the categories of  all other people's
action and by all means absoIutely the categories of  all human action.
However,  the  pragmatist  must  remember  that  these  propositions
work both  in practice  and  in  science, and  the positivist must  not
overlook  the fact that in addressing his  fellow men  he presupposes
-tacitly  and  implicitly-the  intersubjective  validity  of  logic  and
thereby the reality of  the realm of  the alter Ego's thought and action,
of  his eminent human chara~ter.~

My humble blog

It's easy to refute an argument if you first misrepresent it. William Keizer

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 500 Contributor
134 Posts
Points 2,260

Human action can be deterministic but unpredictable.

  • | Post Points: 5
Page 1 of 1 (8 items) | RSS