> I would say that our volition is part of the process/movement/flux itself.
This is what you need to explain. What is volition if it's not free? What is the process that allows flux but not free will?
> I'm saying that the conscious self cannot be other than what it is. You can't choose to not be conscious, at least.
We're not talking about choosing to be conscious or not. We're not talking about choosing to teleport yourself to Saturn either. We're talking about the choices of life and how consciousness and self-direction work.
When you say "the conscious self cannot be other than what it is," are you claiming that we have no participation in the direction our life takes or even in how we assess data in our environment (science, for instance, not simple reaction)? If we don't, then what do you mean by volition? If we do, then how is that not free will?
> there's ontological feedback between different elements of reality.
I've mentioned this that, if it were true, there would be an infinite regression and never any action. I sit here with my computer and choose to raise my hands to the keyboard. What initiated that action? Unless there is a starting point, the action never happens (akin to Kalam's cosmological argument). And if there's a starting point, isn't that free will?
> emergent properties
My problem with this concept is that if intelligence is reducible to brain functions, which in turn are reducible to chemical processes, I have no grounds for trusting intelligence. If intelligence is the product of physical and chemical processes that don't aim at truth, can't understand, and are incapable of making judgments, then reason is unreliable. Physical processes don’t lead us to meaning, judgments, values, and logic (entities that do not exist in the subatomic, chemical, biological, or molecular phenomena). This reductionist-materialist objection is self-defeating.
Here's a sequence I got from a workshop with Dr. Warren Brown, neuroscientist:
- Will (agency) is not about initiation action from inaction, but it the modulation of ongoing action.
- Modulation occurs by comparison of the outcomes of ongoing action with criteria for evaluation.
- As we move up the nervous system more and more complex levels of criteria come into play.
- The anterior frontal lobes evaluate and modulate action with respect to long-term perspectives (past and future).
- Human nervous system is largely a self-organizing complex dynamical system that acts from its own point of view.
- Behavior and thought emerge from complex patterns related to current or imagined environmental situations.
- The very slow physical development of the human brain means it is maximally open to being formed by interaction with the physical and social environment.
- The capacity to simulate action off-line and evaluate the results allows for choice (agency).
His conclusion was that "There is an increasingly large domain of resources within the current understanding of neuroscience that support human moral agency and free will.
> We are parts of reality that influence other parts of reality which influence us. These things feedback off each other and form things from there.
Richard Swinburne comments, "If the universe is infinite, the only causes of its past states are prior past states which ultimately have no cause and so no explanation. Even though each state of the universe will have a complete explanation, the whole infinite series will not have an explanation, for there will be no causes of members of the series, lying outside the series.
"Further, the universe will have during its infinite series certain constant features (even though it could potentially have a different set of features), such as the conservation of matter or energy. These features will also be ultimately inexplicable, because we will not know their cause, and so no explanation.
"So each state of the universe at each instant of time has a complete explanation which is a scientific explanation, but its having certain permanent features have no explanation at all. Therefore, neither in any one single thing, nor in the whole aggregate and series of things, can there be found sufficient reason of existence. If the series is infinite, we shall never come upon a full reason of why there is something rather than nothing, for instance, or why it should be such as it is.
"The reasons of the world, then, lie in something different from the chain of states, or series of things, whose aggregate constitutes the universe. ... God qualifies for the Principle of Sufficient Reason, whereas nature does not.
"Since the ultimate root much be in something which is of metaphysical necessity, and since there is no reason of any existent thing except in an existent thing, it follows that there must exist some one Personal Being of metaphysical necessity, that is, from whose essence existence springs; and so there must exist something different from the plurality of being, that is, the world, as we have allowed and have shown, is not of metaphysical necessity.
"Nature has no sufficient explanation outside of a personal, metaphysically necessary being. God is the terminate of explanation."