Hello once again:
The question I asked nearly three months ago was a question that was a one-off debate over the course of 15 minutes with someone over the phone. However, I just now got the opportunity to bring up that debate again with him in person, and his stance evolved. The idea is, from what I am aware, is fairly common, and is the typical answer that one drums up upon considering how one would argue against free will. Dr. Sam Harris wrote a book on it, and the CosmicSkeptic made a video restating the point. The idea is roughly so:
We either act from desire or coercion. If we are operating from coercion, then clearly we do not have free will in that decision by nature of the label we are attaching to the category. Any desire from which we can act, however, is simply thrust upon us (coming from causal factors that brings us back to the affirmative hard deterministic argument). This assertion is evidenced by our inability to manipulate our desires in any way, to increase or decrease their grip over ourselves, and that we cannot turn them on or off by our own volition. If it were the case that we do something else contrary to that desire, it then must be the case (and, indeed, always will be the case) that another desire has been thrust upon us that would lead to such an outcome. That second desire, too, cannot be changed, only replaced by another desire of greater intensity. Of course, it is clear that we cannot act out on a weaker desire, otherwise its resultant effect would be a stronger desire. For a shared example, CS Lewis wrote in Mere Christianity (Chapter 2 of Book 1, and I believe he references it further on, but I am not sure) that if one were to hear a man crying for help, we would have a desire for both self-preservation and a desire to help the man, the latter being far weaker than the other. However, the "third thing", as he put it, is a desire to follow the latter desire, even if it is the weaker one. Now, it cannot be the case that we made that choice, since it is simply the case that the "moral law" (and this argument purported by others lays no claim to discounting the idea of objective morality, but it seems better to call it by what it is than keep it as the "third thing") was a greater desire than the desire to stay away from danger; the desire to be moral was greater than to preserve oneself. One can see the opposite clearly in acts of unlawfulness, wherein the desire to be moral is lesser than to indulge in such an act, and so it is that the person goes forth with his/her greater desire of committing him/herself to immorality. Free will then, the idea that we pick our desires and manipulate them at our leisure, seems to fall apart.
I would like to know your thoughts on that argument. Or, if I misrepresented it, the actual argument that Dr. Sam Harris put forth in his work. I thank you very much for your assistance.
-Ryan