RigaCrypto
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2006
- Messages
- 446
Well, if you define free will as the lack of a deterministic relationship between the input and output of a cognitive system, the latter could be seen as a device for doing just that.
Consider an ideal cognitive system as one with infinite self-knowledge. That is, the feedback loop would be instantaneous and able to be repeated an infinite number of times for each operation. Thus, its output would be a function of the input, the function being fed back through itself an infinite number of times. It would thus be impossible to predict the output.
A real world cognitive system can not reach infinity, thus it can not reach absolute free will, which is an ideal concept. But its output can only be predicted by a cognitive system more complex (intelligent) than it, thus in practice it could be said that it has free will from the perspective of cognitive systems simpler than it and no free will from the perspective of more complex systems.
Consider an ideal cognitive system as one with infinite self-knowledge. That is, the feedback loop would be instantaneous and able to be repeated an infinite number of times for each operation. Thus, its output would be a function of the input, the function being fed back through itself an infinite number of times. It would thus be impossible to predict the output.
A real world cognitive system can not reach infinity, thus it can not reach absolute free will, which is an ideal concept. But its output can only be predicted by a cognitive system more complex (intelligent) than it, thus in practice it could be said that it has free will from the perspective of cognitive systems simpler than it and no free will from the perspective of more complex systems.