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Philosophical issues
The formalism of this paper takes sides in several philosophical
controversies.
- It considers determinism and free will, as experienced and
observed by humans, as compatible. This is in accordance with the
views of Locke and Hume.
- It takes a third person point of view, i.e. considers the free
will of others and not just the free will of the observer.
- It breaks the phenomenon of free will into parts and considers
the simplest systems first--in contrast to approaches that demand
that all complications be understood before anything can be said.
In this it resembles the approaches to belief and other intentional
states discussed in [Den71], [Den78], and
[McC79]. Starting with simple systems is the
practice in AI, because only what is understood can be implemented
in computer programs.
It seems to me that formulas (1) and (2)
expressing the use of the branching time function in
determining what events occur make the philosophical ideas definite.
Thus we can see which modifications of the notions are compatible with
(1) and (2), and which require different axioms.
The process of deciding what to do often involves considering a pruned
set of actions which eliminate those that have obviously bad
consequences. The remaining actions are those that one can
do. When someone refers to a pruned action, one sometimes gets the
reply, ``Oh, I could do that, but I really can't, because ....''
Next: Praise and blame
Up: SIMPLE DETERMINISTIC FREE WILL
Previous: Knowledge of one's free
John McCarthy
2005-11-06