[Vision2020] Campbell's Philosophical Work Direct Online For Free: Was: Joe Campbell promoted to Professor (was: ... Statesman)
Ted Moffett
starbliss at gmail.com
Mon Feb 28 11:00:45 PST 2011
Given the importance of the concept of "free will" in everyones life,
I find reading about the complexities and uncertainties on this issue
well worth the time, even if the technical nature of philosophical
writing can be "pretty dry," as you wrote, and even if I do not fully
understand the text. Actually, its fascinating, not dry at all...
A widespread in-depth study of this concept might temper the all too
human tendency to severely judge behavior and punish, without a full
consideration of the questions regarding when human behavior is under
rational deliberative control. From "Isolation" by John Lennon: "I
don't expect you to understand, After you've caused so much pain, But
then again, you're not to blame, You're just a human, a victim of the
insane" http://www.songmeanings.net/songs/view/42604/
Many people who have not studied the concept of free will in-depth
appear to think they understand "free will." This is perhaps similar
to someone claiming to be a nuclear physicist, having only make it
through simple Jr. High Newtonian Physics. I recall on Vision2020
someone distinguishing "genuine free will," as opposed to someone with
a mental disorder that disabled this capability.
I do not confidently know how to define "free will," whether genuine
or ersatz. This would require that I be capable of parsing through
and confidently resolving the complex conundrums and puzzles involved,
which I cannot. And there is sufficient credible disagreement among
professional philosophers on these problems for a layperson to
hesitate to consider the issues resolved: Derk Pereboom (
http://www.arts.cornell.edu/phil/homepages/pereboom/ )
"Living Without Free Will": http://ndpr.nd.edu/review.cfm?id=1287
Perhaps the scientific study of how the human brain functions
(neurochemical mapping) will in the future more completely answer some
of the questions regarding this concept.
I am inclined to think that "free will" should be treated as a
scientific concept, subjected to verification via replicatable
scientific theory and experiment, through the peer review process in
science publishing, before I would confidently accept well established
precise conditions under which free will is or is not present in human
behavior. Free will is a concept that has its origins in
pre-scientific thinking, and is entrenched in human culture, as is
religion, for reasons that are not entirely based on science and
logic.
------------------------------------------
Vision2020 Post: Ted Moffett
On 2/27/11, Joe Campbell <philosopher.joe at gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks for posting this Ted, and thanks to Ken for the original post about
> the MIT book series.
>
> As Nick said, the book series is the result of the Inland Northwest
> Philosophy Department. Even more so than with the conference, much of the
> credit to the Topics in Contemporary Philosophy series goes to Michael
> O'Rourke (UI) and other co-editors. I was a substantive co-author of at
> least three of the introductions to this series.
>
> Most of my peer reviewed articles are difficult to get; the links below are
> to unpublished work and drafts of published work. I hope to soon make my
> work accessible from my website. But trust me, the work is pretty dry and
> not the kind of thing you're likely to read when you have the time to read!
> Mostly, I work in philosophical logic. "Strawson's Free Will Naturalism" is
> about as good as it gets wrt my actual research.
>
> There is a link below to a draft of the first two chapters of my forthcoming
> book, Free Will (Polity Press). I've added some material to these chapters,
> most notably a section on the problem of free will and foreknowledge. The
> first two chapters are a broad introduction to traditional and contemporary
> issues about free will and moral responsibility.
>
> Best, Joe
>
> On Sat, Feb 26, 2011 at 12:26 PM, Ted Moffett <starbliss at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Kenneth Marcy kmmos1 at frontier.com
>> Thu Feb 24 21:16:13 PST 2011 wrote:
>>
>> http://mailman.fsr.com/pipermail/vision2020/2011-February/074967.html
>>
>> "Now, if the level of book sales would rise up a bit (or maybe a lot) life
>> would be even better."
>> --------------------------------
>> When you give it away, the book sales might be impacted.
>>
>> Though the University of Idaho website appears to no longer offer
>> Campbell's presentation "Strawson's Free Will Naturalism" referenced
>> in this Vision2020 post from Nov. 2009 (
>> http://mailman.fsr.com/pipermail/vision2020/2009-November/067055.html ),
>> the WSU website offers Campbell's book on free will (I assume the book
>> Campbell mentioned was forthcoming in the Nov. 2009 post above?)
>> direct for free, as revealed below; also, the two essays as shown
>> below are only a mouse click away.
>>
>> I have read (or rather, mouthed the words while my brain was seized by
>> a state of stunned incomprehension) some of Campbell's work on free
>> will, a very difficult and very important subject, critical to our
>> understanding of religion and law, of placing blame, exacting
>> punishment or gaining salvation, that astonishingly is assumed to be
>> well understood by many people who have never done an in-depth study
>> of the daunting complexities and uncertainties of the concept:
>>
>> "Pereboom on Deliberation":
>>
>>
>> http://experimentalphilosophy.typepad.com/2nd_annual_online_philoso/files/cambells_commentary_on_pereboom.pdf
>> ---------------
>> "Compatibilist Alternatives:"
>>
>> http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~uctytho/dfwCompatCampbell.html
>> ---------------
>> "Free Will" (75 pages long, from Polity Press)
>>
>>
>> http://libarts.wsu.edu/philo/faculty-staff/campbell/Campbell.FreeWill,%20Chs.%201-2.pdf
>> ------------------------------------------
>> Vision2020 Post: Ted Moffett
>>
>> On 2/24/11, Kenneth Marcy <kmmos1 at frontier.com> wrote:
>> > On Thursday 24 February 2011 19:26:40 Joe Campbell wrote:
>> >>
>> >> By the way, I found out today that I've been promoted to full
>> >> Professor.
>> >>
>> >
>> > Congratulations!
>> >
>> > Now, if the level of book sales would rise up a bit (or maybe a lot)
>> > life
>> > would be even better. You may be sufficiently polite, or modest, to not
>> > mention
>> > the products with your name on them available from MIT Press, for
>> example,
>> > but
>> > on the occasion of full professorship, I am not averse to mentioning
>> > some
>> of
>> > the reasons for the promotion.
>> >
>> > Those who need some good reading material for any time of the year, but
>> > especially handy in winter time when other activities are restricted,
>> > may
>> > wish
>> > to check out the titles with Professor Campbell as author from MIT
>> > Press:
>> >
>> > http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/author/default.asp?aid=20766
>> >
>> >
>> > Ken
>> >
>> >
>>
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>
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