- Chaos argument
The chaos argument is a
philosophical argument . It argues thatdeterminism is an idealisticmathematical construction whose mapping onto reality is untestable in the realworld , and that this is an essential precondition for the existence offree will .The chaos argument asserts that given any description of position and
momentum (of all particles in theuniverse )approaching completeness, long-term prediction is impossible, because variances from completeness multiply over even short periods oftime .Due to the
uncertainty principle ofquantum mechanics , we as observers can never have access to a complete description and therefore can never close the debate on free will versus determism.Also, the
electrodynamics of thehuman brain are chaotic in nature; accordingly there is also no way to prove, in the event that free will does exist in the universe, whether thehuman has none.One common objection to drawing conclusions about
free will from the chaos argument is that it seems unclear how quantum uncertainty, whether reducible or irreducible, could provide a basis for any kind of free will. The philosopherJ. J. C. Smart observed, "Indeterminism does not confer freedom on us: I would feel that my freedom was impaired if I thought that a quantum mechanical trigger in my brain might cause me to leap into the garden and eat a slug".
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