Close Calls and the Confident Agent: Free Will, Deliberation, and Alternative Possibilities
Nahmias, E. "Close Calls and the Confident Agent: Free Will, Deliberation, and Alternative Possibilities." Philosophical Studies 131(3): 627-67, 2006.
Two intuitions lie at the heart of our conception of free will. One
intuition locates free will in our ability to deliberate effectively
and control our actions accordingly: the ‘Deliberation and Control’
(DC) condition. The other intuition is that free will requires the
existence of alternative possibilities for choice: the AP condition.
These intuitions seem to conflict when, for instance, we deliberate
well to decide what to do, and we do not want it to be possible to act
in some other way. I suggest that intuitions about the AP condition
arise when we face ‘close calls,’ situations in which, after
deliberating, we still do not know what we really want to do. Indeed,
several incompatibilists suggest such close calls are necessary for
free will. I challenge this suggestion by describing a ‘confident
agent’ who, after deliberating, always feels confident about what to do
(and can then control her actions accordingly). Because she maximally
satisfies the DC condition, she does not face close calls, and the
intuition that the AP condition is essential for free will does not
seem to apply to her. I conclude that intuitions about the importance
of the AP condition rest on our experiences of close calls and arise
precisely to the extent that our deliberations fail to arrive at a
clear decision. I then raise and respond to several objections to this
thought experiment and its relevance to the free will debate.