I don't really know where I want the conversation to go, but I hope people are less defensive and more trusting as far as my motives. Otherwise, there will be more and more pages of condemnation with no real substance.
If your motive is to make us new disciples of Lessans vision of humanity, I think it's safe to say you should save your energy and stop now.
I would like to say one thing about indeterminacy. When throwing dice into the air, the outcome is unpredictable because we don't yet know how the the dice will fall. Nevertheless, how it will fall is completely determined by physical laws. It is assumed that if man's will is not free, we could predict behavior in the same way, if we could only know all the variables.
That is indeed what classical determinism states. That everything is predictable in theory. The problem is that quantum physics seem to offer a certain level of indeterminacy, which puts a wild card into the mix. Once indeterminacy comes into the mix, classical determinism falls apart. At least the way I understand it.
But this is unnecessary. The problem with the conventional definition that Lessans was trying to correct is that nothing 'causes' a person to act a certain way.
But Lessans does insist that when faced with many possibilities, we always necessarily go in the direction that offers us the most satisfaction. In other words, it is in our nature to choose what brings us the most satisfaction. Natural selection has programmed us that way. So ultimately, what
causes us to act a certain way is the natural laws that ended up making humans that have a capacity to choose, but only what brings most satisfaction.
If Lessans states that nothing causes us to act a certain way, he has to demonstrate it. He has to back it up. Because in a purely deterministic world, events are caused. If he's going in the direction of determinism to the point of saying we do
not have free will, then there's no reason for the human mind to escape causal connections with the rest of the fabric of reality. There's no reason for the human mind to be out of the equation. Or to be outside the pool table where all balls interact.
Lessans is trying to have it both ways. He states we don't have free will but that because nobody or nothing can force us to do anything, we are 100% responsible for our actions. But there's no free will right? We are forced to do what we do according to the way our minds have been programmed by natural selection.
I'm trying to follow his view but I find it incoherent. One of the reasons none of us are buying Lessans view is that you both failed to demonstrate its coherence.
Now I guess you must explain to me what I don't understand!