On a recent Youtube episode of Theories of Everything with Curt Jaimungal Daniel Dennett, author and Professor of Philosophy at Tufts University in Massachusetts, discusses his views of Robert Sapolsky's recent work around free will. Sapolsky has been doing the rounds of webcasters to promote his new book, Determined: a Science of Life Without Free Will amd is Professor of biology, neurology, neurological sciences, and neurosurgery at Stanford University.
Dennett states (00:00:10):
"Robert makes one big mistake and it's right at the centre of his work...What he's missed is the difference between control an causation".
Dennett then describes a boulder crashing down a mountain. He states the boulder is caused to do this by "...wind pressure, bumps on the way, material, etc, etc".
"Now, if we rewound the tape of life and replayed the tape of that exact circumstance, it would roll in exactly the same way. That's determinism".
He then compares the boulder's journey with that of a skier who skis down the mountain. The skier differs from the boulder, claims Dennett, in that she is in control.
"Now the path of the boulder is determined. The path of the skier is determined. The difference is that the skier's path is controlled. The rock's path is not".
"If you make the distinction between control and causation, then Sapolsky's argument simply falls apart".
[To give some insight into what Sapolsky's position is - and I hope I'm doing him justice here - he invokes a determinism that extends back to the Big Bang in order to deny free will].
Dennett continues:
"...it doesn't go back to the Big Bang. Because once life gets started...life generates controllers. It generates self-controlled little agents. Things that are alive".
He then goes on to focus on the notion of predictability and how "indeterminism is not required for unpredictability". He states that being unpredictable - whilst still being determined - gives us freedom as agents in the sense that it protects us from other agents. He also states that "...determinism doesn't prevent you from acting locally, and making your own choices and not being controlled by the past".
This is where he confuses me. He is asserting control from determined agents. [I have a feeling this what he came to loggerheads with Sam Harris about in their pub debate following Harris's release of his book 'Free Will').
How can there be control within a determined sequence of events? Isn't this merely the illusion of control?.
"Evolution pseudo-randomly makes a lot of mutations and the ones that survive survive because they do things that the competition doesn't do, and this", he says, "is what gives them a kind of control; a kind of reliability".
Jaimungal asks Dennett what Sapolsky's reaction to his basic position was. Dennett paraphrases Sapolsky as saying, "No, no. You're still determined by the events going back to before your birth".
He then goes on to give a 'parable of the bathtub' as a means of describing that we "...are reliable in spite of variations in our past". I can only assume that he is referring obliquely to the patterns of behaviour we form as identities that have evolved over time, but I still don't see how this gets us any closer to free will.
Am I correct in concluding that Dennett and Sapolsky are at odds in relation to very different views of free will? Ie: That Sapolsky is denying the free will that would somehow overcome determinism whereas Dennett is happy with a free will that bestows an illusion of control?