May I remind you though that you said it is not a fact, not that it has not been demonstrated to be a fact. It appears that we have free will and unless someone produces a good reason to think otherwise, it seems best to assume we have free will. That's surely the basis of our ideas of responsibility, isn't it? If someone does not have the ability to do something, we are surely wrong to penalise them for it.
I appreciate that since we cannot demonstrate that free will does exist, so am not trying to shift the burden of proof, but as far as I am aware no-one has demonstrated that free will does not exist. If that is correct, then we cannot say that the absence of free will is a fact.
That we have apparent free will, is eeerm, apparent. Lots of things seem untuitively undeniable to us, but that is often a facet of how things seem to us. The chair I am sitting on feels solid, but it isn't, really. Look out of the window, the sky looks blue, but it isn't, really. I feel like a human, but by cell count I am really a bacterial colony on legs. But for most practical purposes I can go about life enjoying the blueness of the sky and the comfort of my armchair; when I am introduced to someone I don't bother introducing also the billions of cohabiting microbes that form the bulk of me. Likewise i can go around making choices happily without consideration for whether my choices are truly free or are they ultimately largely predetermined. So long as it feels free then I am happy with that. But if you want to develop a deeper understanding of what we are, that entails delving down and dismissing our illusions in order to come to terms with the underlying realities of life, and there is nothing that we have discovered through research that would lend support to the idea that we are truly free. Like all else in life, we are the ultimately products of natural law, our choices express natural law, we cannot fashion it, subvert it, avoid it, or remake it by willpower.
So sometimes what seems obviously true is not true. I don't think anyone would disagree with that, but what
evidence is there that freewill does not exist? We could bung in lots of words instead of "free will" in your statement. Let's try "external minds".
That there are
apparently external minds, is eeerm, apparent. "Lots of things seem untuitively undeniable to us, but that is often a facet of how things seem to us. The chair I am sitting on feels solid, but it isn't, really. Look out of the window, the sky looks blue, but it isn't, really. I feel like a human, but by cell count I am really a bacterial colony on legs. But for most practical purposes I can go about life enjoying the blueness of the sky and the comfort of my armchair; when I am introduced to someone I don't bother introducing also the billions of cohabiting microbes that form the bulk of me. Likewise i can go around making choices happily without consideration for whether my choices are truly free or are they ultimately largely predetermined. So long as it feels free then I am happy with that. But if you want to develop a deeper understanding of what we are, that entails delving down and dismissing our illusions in order to come to terms with the underlying realities of life, and there is nothing that we have discovered through research that would lend support to the idea that we are truly free. Like all else in life, we are the ultimately products of natural law, our choices express natural law, we cannot fashion it, subvert it, avoid it, or remake it by willpower."
See? I've changed the subject of your statement and it no more demonstrates that external minds (external to mine or yours) do not exist than your original statement demonstrated the non-existence of free will.