Difference between revisions of "DEC 7"

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(Created page with "==25: DEC 7== ===Assigned Reading=== :*Burkhard Bilger, "Can Babies Learn to Love Vegetables?," New Yorker, Nov 25, 2019 (12) :*Tarragon & Moreno, "Role of Endocannabinooids...")
 
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==25: DEC 7==
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==27: DEC 7==
  
===Assigned Reading===
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===Assigned===
  
:*Burkhard Bilger, "Can Babies Learn to Love Vegetables?," New Yorker, Nov 25, 2019 (12)
+
:*Dennett, What is Free Will? 6 minute video [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joCOWaaTj4A]
:*Tarragon & Moreno, "Role of Endocannabinooids on Sweet Taste Perception, Food Preference, and Obesity-related Disorders" ''Chemical Senses'' v. 43, 3-16, 2018. (13)
+
:*Greg Caruso and Daniel Dennett, "Just Deserts" [https://aeon.co/essays/on-free-will-daniel-dennett-and-gregg-caruso-go-head-to-head].
:*Rolls, Barbara, "The Role of Energy Density in the Overconsumption of Fat," ''American Society for Nutritional Sciences'', 2000, 246-253. (7)
 
  
===Burkhard Bilger, "Can Babies Learn to Love Vegetables? ===
+
===Caruso & Dennett, "Just Deserts"===
  
:*1st theme: The Good Tastes Study - Susan Johnson U of Col. pediatricsBaby taste tests.   
+
:*Caruso: What we do and the way we are is ''ultimately'' the result of factors beyond our control. [No Ultimate Resp. thesis - NUR]
 +
:*Dennett: [Seems to defend "mitigated free will"].  Some people have mental disabilities that makes them not responsible, but normal people are morally responsibility and deserve praise or blame. Need to distinguish between causation and controlThere are causal chains that turned you into an autonomous, self-controlling agent[The "normally competent agent" - NCA]
  
:*2nd theme: Calvin Schwabe - veternary epidemiologist UC Davis.  ''Unmentionable Cuisine'' .  We're omnivoresWe're passing up alot of food, like cats and beetles.  In a sense we are our tastes -- supertasters, low tasters/high sugar preference. Julie Menella from Monell Chemical Senses.  omnivores/brain plasticity (recall Shepard)
+
:*Caruso: No problem with NCA, who is "responsive to reasons".  NCAs are autonomous and have controlBut they don't possess the characteristics that would justify "basic desert" responsibility. People don't ''deserve'' to have "something bad happen to them just because they have knowingly done wrong"Totally "backward looking".  Retributivism overlaps with consequentialism (explain) but the distinctive different is that retributivist thinks punishment is justified.  I don't because of NURThere may be "forward looking" reasons to keep certain systems of punishment and reward, like "incapacitating, rehabilitating and deterring offenders" [what we've been calling "penalties and interventions"]
  
:*3rd theme: Saskia Sorrosa, CEO of Fresh Bellies -- Ecuadoran, didn't like baby food options for her daughter. Represents traditional cuisine argument for baby food (at the end of the article you get another example): babies eat adult foods, specially prepared. '''Palette Training''' - [interesting idea that our palattes are trained, even before birth, and in early childhood (Mennella - everything gets through to the fetus)Possibly the same systems and mechanisms as you would encounter in changing your diet (we are all Judge 7). Fresh Bellies is doing very well (new food economy!) Their formula: no added sugar, natural (acid) preservation instead of industrial pasteurization3x price (maybe another 50 cent egg lesson?)
+
:*Dennett: I too reject retributivism, along views of free will [libertarian] that support it. [This will be a major point of dispute between them.]  But there is a "backward looking" justification for punishment: [read example of promise breaking]. "deserving of negative consequences"This is something autonomous people accept as a condition of political freedom. Analogy of sports penaltiesThey can be deserved. Argument against NUR: So what? We grow into our autonomy.
  
:*baby food industry back story -- 9 billion - mostly fruit and sweetened vegetablesAmy Bentley, ''Inventing Baby Food''. Before vitamin discovery, veggies seen as source of illness due to unclearn conditions.
+
:*Caruso: [Are you sure you're not a retributivist, DD?] Isn't "deserving negative consequences" retributivism? The consequentialist benefits of punishment don't require "desert" [but just MR as "accountability" -- You did it, maybe on purpose...].  There are good [forward looking] reasons to keep penalties.  [References the "moral luck" literature from Nagel.] Luck doesn't "even out", SES affects brain development, educational inequalities....[In a word, lucky privileged people.]
  
:*1921 Harold Clapp, first baby foodSome details there. 1969 baby food scandals - contamination and research on rats showing hypertension from baby food1/3 of baby food homemade.   
+
:*Dennett: I'm using the "every day" sense of "deserve"I want to avoid "case by case" considerations of MR. You are "entitled" to the praise you get from good things and the "criticism, shame, and blame" from breaking the lawI'm still for criminal justice reform -- shorter sentences, no death penalty, rehab and reinstatement.   
  
:*4th theme: Inside Gerber's baby food testing facility. 2/3 market share! "baby black ops site". Judge #7Baby sugar bliss points are twice adultsFrom 1970 - 2000 childhood obesity tripled7 month olds drinking sodaGerber adds fruit to everything, not added sugar anymore. [But what sort of palatte training is fruit and veg? Or yours? How does your diet train your palatte?]
+
:*Caruso: It doesn't help to appeal to the everyday sense, since that includes retributivist beliefs -- 1. backward-looking; 2. just deserts, and ''that's what we are trying to figure out'' (e.g. you're begging the question)If you say that the murderer deserves to go to prison for "a very long time" irrespective of future consequences, you are a retributivist[ Think "strike back".] Example of EinsteinWe can "attribute" things to Einstein.... You do offer a "forward looking justification for backward looking MR" [Roughly, we don't get the benefits of a stable society without punishing people in the "moral desert" sense.] But that's an empirical question; it's not justified by "moral desert" but only if the consequences follow.  
  
:*Palatte training claim: it takes 10 tries.  Most parents give up after 3-4 tries.   
+
:*Dennett: Non-retributive punishment (visiting negative consequences on people ''because they deserve it'') is justified in part by the need to promote "respect for the law" [connect to Henrich] Cites Hobbes.   
  
:*New industrial baby and early childhood foods in developmentMore squeezable tubes for delivery.   
+
:*Caruso: [a bit frustrated] You say you're baffled that I don't see that you are not a retributivist, but you said that earlier that there are "backward looking" justifications for punishment based on desert.  But when you elaborate that, it's all about forward looking justifications.  [We're better off punishing.]  Cites the "public health argument" from his book.  Focusing on backward looking punishment keeps us from looking at the social causes of crimeObama quote[Note connection with Cavadino: We're looking at neo-liberal ideology....]. Claims society won't fall apart in the Hobbesian sense.
  
:*5th theme - from baby food to military foods (big theme in food nutrition awareness historically was from military preparedness.  Many battles lost to scurvy and malnutrition). How fighter pilots eat.
+
===Small Group Discussion: Assessing the Caruso - Dennett discussion===
 +
:*Here some questions from the discussion that it might be helpful for you to sort out your thinking about:
 +
::*Is Dennett ultimately a retributivist? 
 +
::*Is there a "backward looking" justification for punishment apart from forward looking consequences?
 +
::*Is the "backward looking" approach a relic of an early cultural adaptation (Henrich) or still important to social stability? In other words, even if your are "justified" in "striking back," should you, should we?
  
:*Closing scene at African market in Maine.  How people from non-industrial cuisines feed their babies.  But you have to have a cuisine to do this.  Americans have an "interrupted cuisine"
+
===Dennett's Naturalist view in ''Freedom Evolves''===
  
===Tarragon & Moreno, "Role of Endocannabinooids on Sweet Taste Perception, Food Preference, and Obesity-related Disorders" ===
+
:*Our folk psychological idea of Free will.  The homunculus or soul or real self is somehow independent of influences. In philosophy, this is "Libertarian Free Will".  Not well supported.
 +
::*Examples of decision making for us to pay attention to:  Make a decision in response to the following prompts. 1, 2.  Did the decisions feel free? Did you feel absolutely free of influences or did you feel like you
 +
::*Rethinking your concept of free will doesn't require you to deny anything about your "agency" - Your actual capabilities for decision making, reasoning, understanding the world, etc.  In fact, it helps to have evidence of this to challenge your folk psychology.
  
:*You could work from the abstract on this oneI just wanted you to see some technical research to balance the Nyer articleAlso, the research paradigm in this article connects with the "conditioned hypereating" theory of Kessler and depends upon findings in neurogastronomy.
+
:*'''The Standard Argument for Incompatibilism''' that our Folk Psychology encourages(Should we resist?)
 +
::*If Determinism is true, everything is inevitable. (recall physics consult)
 +
::*If everything is inevitable, the future has no real possibilities(No "open futures")
 +
::*If everything is inevitable, you can't blame someone for not doing otherwise than they did. (No "alternative possibilities.")
 +
::*If you can't blame someone for their actions, then there is no MR and retributive punishment is unjust.
  
:*Summary: Claims that highly palatable food is part of obesity problem.  References mechanisms of food choice: reward system, environmental cues, internal factorsThe article is a literature review of: 1. research on how our food tastes emerge and get fixed, especially sweet taste; 2. how genetics, experience, lifestyle, etc. influence palette; 3. the role of the "endocannabinoid system (ECS)" in setting the palette.
+
:*If you are like most people, you will not accept this argument. And you shouldn't. The question is, who has a better solution? Naturalists suggest that our folk psychology confusing us about the consequences of determinism, maybe because it wasn't designed for these kinds of questionsSo their solution is to give an analysis of the implications of determinism that makes room for free will and to show how "freedom and free willing" might arise from nature.  (If this seems like a stretch, philosophers have been here before. Mind from matter? Surely, you jest!)
  
:*Some highlights: research on parallel between food cravings and drug cravings (also in Kessler and Shepard). Details of sweet receptors (recently found in the gut, adipose tissue, and the brain, as well).  There is a genetic dimension to sweet taste perception.  p. 4 - people with particular alleles of the T1R genes have greater sweetness discrimination (note, they may have a more multi-sensory experience of sweetness).  (table 1 summarizes some of this research).
+
::*Digressive note: It doesn't really help to imagine an indeterministic world to solve the problem.  There would be no prediction in a world without (causal) regularitiesIt would at least be a very annoying world, and not obviously "free."
  
:*ECS (endocannabinoid system) - mechanisms. [Digresssion: From wiki page on ECS: "A related study found that endocannabinoids affect taste perception in taste cells[60] In taste cells, endocannabinoids were shown to selectively enhance the strength of neural signaling for sweet tastes, whereas leptin decreased the strength of this same response. While there is need for more research, these results suggest that cannabinoid activity in the hypothalamus and nucleus accumbens is related to appetitive, food-seeking behavior.[57]"
+
:*'''Rethinking Determinism'''.  Here are three key challenges to the standard argument for incompatibilism (above) from naturalists:
 +
::*1. '''Determinism doesn't make things inevitable.'''
 +
::*2. There are real present and future possibilities in a determinist world, just not the "open futures" of folk psychology.
 +
::*3. Freedom evolved in us in nature. 
 +
:*In other words, the naturalist thinks free will and freedom (and some version of responsibility, if not punishment) are possible in a deterministic world with no "open futures".  As we will see, part of the strategy is to show just how complicated we are, to be creatures who engage in inquiry and use knowledge to avoid back outcomes and create good ones.  So, we might be "Determined (by nature) to improve the future!". 
 +
:*Where does all that improvement show up?  In culture, but only if things go right (remember Rapa Nui!). As we know from our studies this semester, "going right" in culture means benefiting from cooperation and acquiring cultural "packages" of mental adaptations that address the basic dilemmas of social creatures like us.  Ultimately, surviving and thriving.
  
:*eCBs are synthesized as part of the chemical system that gives us hedonic responses from food.  Example practical studies: Argueta p. 6. "Dysregulation" of the ECS is related to decrease in pleasure from foodSome research, p. 7, on effects of high O6/O3 ratios on ECS. Connections also between ECS and inflammation, depression.
+
:*So that's where we're headed. Now let's look at the naturalist's analysis in a little detail.   
  
:*from conclusion.
+
:*'''1. Determinism doesn't make things inevitable.'''
 +
::*Artificial Life research models how design can emerge from a set of artificially defined "creatures" moving in a completely deterministic manner, as in a video game.  (Nerdy digression: Artificial life models can create "touring machines," which means they can solve computational problems.)  Some creatures could develop "avoidance capabilities".  '''The birth of "evitability"!'''  You could imagine the computer programmers are acting as "hacker gods" to add design (they don't have to), but imagine instead that the creatures develope R&D capabilities, as we have.  Not so implausible that nature designed us to be good "avoiders".  We also have circuits for rewards and searching! 
 +
::*In evolutionary theory, we describe the emergence of multi-cellular organisms as solving problems of parasitic genes and achieving a stable organism that persists....  Nature is full of "evitability" -- ways organisms avoid harm.
  
===Rolls, Barbara, "The Role of Energy Density in the Overconsumption of Fat,"  ===
+
:*'''2. There are real present and future possibilities in a determinist world''', just not the "open futures" of folk psychology.
 +
::*If something can be "determined to change" then it has, in a sense, an "open future." (Still not the folk psychological one exactly.)  In us, meta-cognitive and social processes feed into our decision making, allowing us to re-evaluate the "weights" we give to different possibilities. 
 +
::*The way we actually think about possibility ''when we are engaged in inquiry'' is compatible with determinism.  Analysis of: "I could have made that putt."  Makes sense if you mean "If the world hade been slightly different.  In inquiry, and with our big brains, we imagine possible worlds in which the wind didn't blow or I wasn't thinking about my taxes while making the putt.  But it doesn't make sense to say, "No, I mean that I could have made the putt in this world!", because you didn't.
 +
::*We create real possibilities in the present and future by using reason to replay scenarios and approach them differently.  Examples: Improving your social skills, academic skills.  If it feels like your "in charge", well, you are. All of these causal forces intersect with you and you happen to have a brain.
  
:*The nutrition rock star herself. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YfFGqerELdE]
+
:*'''3. Freedom evolved in us in nature.''' 
 
+
::*If freedom means avoiding bad outcomes and having lots of real possibilities in your life, then it might be possible to account for that in a deterministic world.  
:*Energy density theory - High energy dense, low volume foods cause lower levels of satiety. 
+
::*The evolution of freedom happens through the evolution of the socially evolved behaviors and structures we've been studying(Dennett's research based isn't as up to date as ours!) Cooperation, culture, accumulated knowledge, complex societies supporting lots and lots of education provide us more freedom than our ancestors.
 
+
::*Obvious example: Without vaccines we would be less free.
:*Back to "Does fat make you fat?" - Maybe the energy density of fat, like the density of highly palatable foods, makes you unsatiated (or satiated too quickly).  Old idea: fat has a unique ability to make you fat.  New research, when controlled for energy density, fats and carbs have similar effects on satiety (measured as subsequent food intake after a "pre load" of some food under study).
+
::*Contrast with traditional concept of free will: binary, metaphysically opaque. Evolved freedom admits of degreesLots of potential implications for responsibility and punishment.  
 
+
::*Implication: We are not all equally freeFreedom is powerful and fragile.
:*water as beverage vs. water in foods (as in youtube) -
+
::*Implication: You can hold normal people responsible for their behavior, but there's no justification of absolute responsibility hereYou can hold people responsible because they are designed to be responsible.
 
 
:*269S: studies suggesting that we eat by weight, not by energy intake.  So the same amount of food by weight, if energy dense, will increase our calorie intake[Any speculations on why we might have evolve to connect satisfaction to volume of food, not just energy?]
 
 
 
:*Note: High volume, high nutrition, low density foods are typical of humble cuisines.
 
 
 
===Final Essay: Satiety and Dietary Change (1000 words)===
 
 
 
::*'''Topic Prompt''': Based on the reading in this unit, describe the human "flavor-reward-satisfaction" system and show how this system not only connects us to our diets, but helps explain unhealthy eating patterns, including overeating (750). Are there some practical lessons we can take from this research? (250)
 
 
 
:*'''Advice about collaboration''': I encourage you to collaborate with other students, but only up to the point of sharing ideas, references to class notes and readings, and your own notes. Collaboration is part of the academic process and the intellectual world that college courses are based on, so it is important to me that you have the possibility to collaborateIt's a great way to make sure that a high average level of learning and development occurs.  The best way to avoid plagiarism is to '''NOT''' share text of draft answers or outlines of your answer. Keep it verbal.  Generate your own examples. 
 
 
 
:*Prepare your answer and submit it in the following way:
 
::# '''Do not put your name in the file or filename'''You may put your student id number in the file.  Put a word count in the file.
 
::# In Word, check "File" and "Options" to make sure your name does not appear as author.  You may want to change this to "anon" for this document.
 
::# Format your answer in double spaced text in a 12 point font, using normal margins.   
 
::# Save the file in the ".docx" file format using the file name "FoodHappiness".
 
::# Log in to courses.alfino.org.  Upload your file to the '''Final Essay''' dropbox by '''Monday, December 14, 2020, midnight'''.
 

Latest revision as of 21:00, 7 December 2021

27: DEC 7

Assigned

  • Dennett, What is Free Will? 6 minute video [1]
  • Greg Caruso and Daniel Dennett, "Just Deserts" [2].

Caruso & Dennett, "Just Deserts"

  • Caruso: What we do and the way we are is ultimately the result of factors beyond our control. [No Ultimate Resp. thesis - NUR]
  • Dennett: [Seems to defend "mitigated free will"]. Some people have mental disabilities that makes them not responsible, but normal people are morally responsibility and deserve praise or blame. Need to distinguish between causation and control. There are causal chains that turned you into an autonomous, self-controlling agent. [The "normally competent agent" - NCA]
  • Caruso: No problem with NCA, who is "responsive to reasons". NCAs are autonomous and have control. But they don't possess the characteristics that would justify "basic desert" responsibility. People don't deserve to have "something bad happen to them just because they have knowingly done wrong". Totally "backward looking". Retributivism overlaps with consequentialism (explain) but the distinctive different is that retributivist thinks punishment is justified. I don't because of NUR. There may be "forward looking" reasons to keep certain systems of punishment and reward, like "incapacitating, rehabilitating and deterring offenders" [what we've been calling "penalties and interventions"]
  • Dennett: I too reject retributivism, along views of free will [libertarian] that support it. [This will be a major point of dispute between them.] But there is a "backward looking" justification for punishment: [read example of promise breaking]. "deserving of negative consequences". This is something autonomous people accept as a condition of political freedom. Analogy of sports penalties. They can be deserved. Argument against NUR: So what? We grow into our autonomy.
  • Caruso: [Are you sure you're not a retributivist, DD?] Isn't "deserving negative consequences" retributivism? The consequentialist benefits of punishment don't require "desert" [but just MR as "accountability" -- You did it, maybe on purpose...]. There are good [forward looking] reasons to keep penalties. [References the "moral luck" literature from Nagel.] Luck doesn't "even out", SES affects brain development, educational inequalities....[In a word, lucky privileged people.]
  • Dennett: I'm using the "every day" sense of "deserve". I want to avoid "case by case" considerations of MR. You are "entitled" to the praise you get from good things and the "criticism, shame, and blame" from breaking the law. I'm still for criminal justice reform -- shorter sentences, no death penalty, rehab and reinstatement.
  • Caruso: It doesn't help to appeal to the everyday sense, since that includes retributivist beliefs -- 1. backward-looking; 2. just deserts, and that's what we are trying to figure out (e.g. you're begging the question). If you say that the murderer deserves to go to prison for "a very long time" irrespective of future consequences, you are a retributivist. [ Think "strike back".] Example of Einstein. We can "attribute" things to Einstein.... You do offer a "forward looking justification for backward looking MR" [Roughly, we don't get the benefits of a stable society without punishing people in the "moral desert" sense.] But that's an empirical question; it's not justified by "moral desert" but only if the consequences follow.
  • Dennett: Non-retributive punishment (visiting negative consequences on people because they deserve it) is justified in part by the need to promote "respect for the law" [connect to Henrich] Cites Hobbes.
  • Caruso: [a bit frustrated] You say you're baffled that I don't see that you are not a retributivist, but you said that earlier that there are "backward looking" justifications for punishment based on desert. But when you elaborate that, it's all about forward looking justifications. [We're better off punishing.] Cites the "public health argument" from his book. Focusing on backward looking punishment keeps us from looking at the social causes of crime. Obama quote. [Note connection with Cavadino: We're looking at neo-liberal ideology....]. Claims society won't fall apart in the Hobbesian sense.

Small Group Discussion: Assessing the Caruso - Dennett discussion

  • Here some questions from the discussion that it might be helpful for you to sort out your thinking about:
  • Is Dennett ultimately a retributivist?
  • Is there a "backward looking" justification for punishment apart from forward looking consequences?
  • Is the "backward looking" approach a relic of an early cultural adaptation (Henrich) or still important to social stability? In other words, even if your are "justified" in "striking back," should you, should we?

Dennett's Naturalist view in Freedom Evolves

  • Our folk psychological idea of Free will. The homunculus or soul or real self is somehow independent of influences. In philosophy, this is "Libertarian Free Will". Not well supported.
  • Examples of decision making for us to pay attention to: Make a decision in response to the following prompts. 1, 2. Did the decisions feel free? Did you feel absolutely free of influences or did you feel like you
  • Rethinking your concept of free will doesn't require you to deny anything about your "agency" - Your actual capabilities for decision making, reasoning, understanding the world, etc. In fact, it helps to have evidence of this to challenge your folk psychology.
  • The Standard Argument for Incompatibilism that our Folk Psychology encourages. (Should we resist?)
  • If Determinism is true, everything is inevitable. (recall physics consult)
  • If everything is inevitable, the future has no real possibilities. (No "open futures")
  • If everything is inevitable, you can't blame someone for not doing otherwise than they did. (No "alternative possibilities.")
  • If you can't blame someone for their actions, then there is no MR and retributive punishment is unjust.
  • If you are like most people, you will not accept this argument. And you shouldn't. The question is, who has a better solution? Naturalists suggest that our folk psychology confusing us about the consequences of determinism, maybe because it wasn't designed for these kinds of questions. So their solution is to give an analysis of the implications of determinism that makes room for free will and to show how "freedom and free willing" might arise from nature. (If this seems like a stretch, philosophers have been here before. Mind from matter? Surely, you jest!)
  • Digressive note: It doesn't really help to imagine an indeterministic world to solve the problem. There would be no prediction in a world without (causal) regularities. It would at least be a very annoying world, and not obviously "free."
  • Rethinking Determinism. Here are three key challenges to the standard argument for incompatibilism (above) from naturalists:
  • 1. Determinism doesn't make things inevitable.
  • 2. There are real present and future possibilities in a determinist world, just not the "open futures" of folk psychology.
  • 3. Freedom evolved in us in nature.
  • In other words, the naturalist thinks free will and freedom (and some version of responsibility, if not punishment) are possible in a deterministic world with no "open futures". As we will see, part of the strategy is to show just how complicated we are, to be creatures who engage in inquiry and use knowledge to avoid back outcomes and create good ones. So, we might be "Determined (by nature) to improve the future!".
  • Where does all that improvement show up? In culture, but only if things go right (remember Rapa Nui!). As we know from our studies this semester, "going right" in culture means benefiting from cooperation and acquiring cultural "packages" of mental adaptations that address the basic dilemmas of social creatures like us. Ultimately, surviving and thriving.
  • So that's where we're headed. Now let's look at the naturalist's analysis in a little detail.
  • 1. Determinism doesn't make things inevitable.
  • Artificial Life research models how design can emerge from a set of artificially defined "creatures" moving in a completely deterministic manner, as in a video game. (Nerdy digression: Artificial life models can create "touring machines," which means they can solve computational problems.) Some creatures could develop "avoidance capabilities". The birth of "evitability"! You could imagine the computer programmers are acting as "hacker gods" to add design (they don't have to), but imagine instead that the creatures develope R&D capabilities, as we have. Not so implausible that nature designed us to be good "avoiders". We also have circuits for rewards and searching!
  • In evolutionary theory, we describe the emergence of multi-cellular organisms as solving problems of parasitic genes and achieving a stable organism that persists.... Nature is full of "evitability" -- ways organisms avoid harm.
  • 2. There are real present and future possibilities in a determinist world, just not the "open futures" of folk psychology.
  • If something can be "determined to change" then it has, in a sense, an "open future." (Still not the folk psychological one exactly.) In us, meta-cognitive and social processes feed into our decision making, allowing us to re-evaluate the "weights" we give to different possibilities.
  • The way we actually think about possibility when we are engaged in inquiry is compatible with determinism. Analysis of: "I could have made that putt." Makes sense if you mean "If the world hade been slightly different. In inquiry, and with our big brains, we imagine possible worlds in which the wind didn't blow or I wasn't thinking about my taxes while making the putt. But it doesn't make sense to say, "No, I mean that I could have made the putt in this world!", because you didn't.
  • We create real possibilities in the present and future by using reason to replay scenarios and approach them differently. Examples: Improving your social skills, academic skills. If it feels like your "in charge", well, you are. All of these causal forces intersect with you and you happen to have a brain.
  • 3. Freedom evolved in us in nature.
  • If freedom means avoiding bad outcomes and having lots of real possibilities in your life, then it might be possible to account for that in a deterministic world.
  • The evolution of freedom happens through the evolution of the socially evolved behaviors and structures we've been studying. (Dennett's research based isn't as up to date as ours!) Cooperation, culture, accumulated knowledge, complex societies supporting lots and lots of education provide us more freedom than our ancestors.
  • Obvious example: Without vaccines we would be less free.
  • Contrast with traditional concept of free will: binary, metaphysically opaque. Evolved freedom admits of degrees. Lots of potential implications for responsibility and punishment.
  • Implication: We are not all equally free. Freedom is powerful and fragile.
  • Implication: You can hold normal people responsible for their behavior, but there's no justification of absolute responsibility here. You can hold people responsible because they are designed to be responsible.