Copyrighted Logo

css menu by Css3Menu.com


 

Bruce's 5th book, a Home Study Course, is now available.
Books & Tapes by Bruce Moen
    Bruce's Blog now at http://www.afterlife-knowledge.com/blog....

  HomeHelpSearchLoginRegister  
 
Pages: 1 2 
Send Topic Print
Free Will (Read 5491 times)
I Am Dude
Super Member
*****
Offline



Posts: 1462
Gender: male
Free Will
Jan 9th, 2010 at 2:04am
 
Is free will an illusion?  Studies have shown that this very well may be the case, at least in the way we usually think of free will.

In one of the first studies of its kind, scientists measured the time it took for a touch stimulus to register in the brain of a patient.  The patients were also instructed to press a button the moment they felt the stimulus.  The findings were groundbreaking.

It took the brain 0.0001 of a second to register the stimulus on the skin, and the patients pressed the button 0.1 of a second after the stimulus was applied.

However, the patients did not become consciously aware of the stimulus until about 0.5 second!  This means that the patients' decision to press the button was not acted out by their conscious mind, but by another portion of their minds, probably their unconscious.  None of the patients were aware of this time lag.  The patients' brains seemed to generate the delusion that they had consciously controlled their action, when in reality this was not the case.

Further studies have shown that the brain begins generating the signals necessary for moving muscles one and a half seconds BEFORE we "consciously decide" to move. 

To further this idea, other studies have shown(through experiments with EEGs and EKGs) that the human energy field responds to stimuli even before the brain does.

So what is going on here?  It appears that an unconscious/superconscious/"higher" aspect of our being is actually in charge of our physical actions, and we are tricked into thinking it's the decision of our conscious selves, when this is obviously not the case. 

This is pretty mind boggling.  Every physical action we take is put into motion before we even consciously decide to do it.  This puts a big dent into the free will concept.  I believe there is free will, but maybe it works in a way we have yet to discover.
Back to top
 

But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you.
 
IP Logged
 
DocM
Super Member
*****
Offline


Afterlife Knowledge Member

Posts: 2168
Re: Free Will
Reply #1 - Jan 9th, 2010 at 5:24am
 
Hi Dude,

I see no conflict here.  You see science does not recognize that there is a human soul or consciousness.  Of course we all know that we operate on conscious and deeper subconscious levels at the same time.  When a concert pianist plays flight of the bumblebee (a complex and extremely rapid music), much of it is done subconsciously or by memory.

Yet I think of the brain as a receiver, like a radio, and our consciousness as the real person.  So you are saying that we respond before we say our physical body is aware of the stimulus.  Not surprising to me at all.  Your followup thought, that this means someone else or something (a distinct entity from "me") else must be responding makes no sense to me, given what I understand about the human brain. 

My conscious spirit's perception of the stimulus is not  reliant on the speed of transmission of a nerve cell or an electrical impulse.  That is why an aura may change or a response may come out at different times.  You are assuming that the brain produces thought, and therefore you find a paradox.  I assume only that the brain manifests and receives thought for purposes of interacting on what we know as the physical plane, so the studies you mention make perfect sense to me, without invoking a loss of my will.  It has been well documented that on the mental/spiritual planes, much information can pass between people almost instanteously since "mind" is not at all related to the time electrochemical impulses take to travel from point A to point B.

Matthew
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
Lights of Love
Super Member
*****
Offline


Afterlife Knowledge Member

Posts: 881
Re: Free Will
Reply #2 - Jan 9th, 2010 at 11:28am
 
I'm in agreement with Matthew. Free will/choice necessarily is intrinsic to the One consciousness system in which we all exist. If it were not, then it could not arise at any level of our being. In this world will may not always seem to be free because of the constrained physics/laws that govern this reality. However, it is only our inner consciousness and thoughts that can truly bind and limit us in such a way that free will appears to either be limited or not exist.

Have you ever noticed the difference between thought that is received through the brain and thought that takes place in your non-physical mind?  There is a distinct difference.  Try noticing this while exploring non-physical realities.

Kathy
Back to top
 

Tread softly through life with a tender heart and a gentle, understanding spirit.
 
IP Logged
 
I Am Dude
Super Member
*****
Offline



Posts: 1462
Gender: male
Re: Free Will
Reply #3 - Jan 9th, 2010 at 3:30pm
 
Doc

I agree that the brain is a receiver of consciousness. 

However, my follow up thought is not that someone or something else must be responding, but rather, another portion of our being is doing the responding, likely an unconscious or superconscious aspect of our minds. 

You say that the conscious spirit's perception is not reliant on the speed of transmission of an electrical impulse from the brain, and this is true when our spirit is not one with our physical body during normal waking consciousness.  However, when we are physically active, our consciousness is filtered through our brains and therefore our physical bodies, and so when we are physically aware, this awareness is dependent upon our brain and physical body system.  This is why our consciousness is distorted when we use drugs and other mind-altering substances, and why those with physical defects cannot fully use their minds.  Heck, this is why none of us can use the full potential of our true, higher minds while physical.

I don't assume our brain produces thought.  However, it is clear that my thoughts come from my spirit consciousness via my brain while I am physical, and in this way the brain is a necessary and integral part of my physical thinking self.

And so back to my point.  Our bodies respond before our physical conscious selves tell it to.  And our energy field/spirit responds before the physical body.  So it is apparent that our actions are not dictated by what we believe is our physical conscious self, but instead by a higher aspect of our self, and somehow the true mental activity of this higher aspect is filtered through our brains, and what we believe "we" are thinking is actually a translation of what this higher aspect of our selves are thinking, and being that the body moves not only before "we" tell it to, but before we are even aware of the movement, it is apparent that this action is likewise a dictation from this higher aspect of our being. 

I don't view this as a paradox.  Rather, as a new and more true way of viewing the relationship of our higher self with our bodies.

What's interesting, and that many people will not be able to except despite the overwhelming evidence for it, is that when we decide to make an action or even think a thought, it is actually already taking place before we are even aware of deciding to make the action or think the thought, and therefore these physical and mental actions are being dictated not by what we think is our conscious self, but by an aspect of our being which we are, for the most part, unaware of while physically conscious.
Back to top
 

But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you.
 
IP Logged
 
DocM
Super Member
*****
Offline


Afterlife Knowledge Member

Posts: 2168
Re: Free Will
Reply #4 - Jan 9th, 2010 at 3:48pm
 
I agree but disagree dude.  The essential "Dude" is the point of consciousness that exists in the mental plane.  The physical body is the vehicle that "Dude" manifests in our shared physical reality.  Now, you can call it higher self, but I see it merely as the true "Dude."  I don't see a separate physical/conscious self on the earth plane.  So I would say in one sense, yes, the real "Dude" is not his body in the physical world, but is in an interpenetrating mental plane.  Action and reaction on the mental/spiritual plane is instantaneous.  Thought operates in this area, not in your physical brain or in my fingertips, or anywhere else.

Dude said: "This means that the patients' decision to press the button was not acted out by their conscious mind, but by another portion of their minds, probably their unconscious." What you call the unconscious may simply be part of what we call our consciousness in the mental plane.  I see no reason to invoke a higher self, merely a different reaction in the processing of our consciousness in the mental plane.  If some reactions come from feedback pipelines from the physical vehicle to the mind and then back, then there may be rate limiting steps like nerve conduction that would always apply.  If the mind is "watching events" in the physcial and bypasses its two way feedback, it can directly stimulate the response before the nerve conduction delivers the information.  This bypassing of the nerve conduction is not surprising to me.  Nerve impulse traveling into the brain are called afferent stimuli.  Yet, it is clear that disembodied spirits and consciousness can see and hear us without the need of a physical vehicle.  So in essence, for many people, the perception may not need to wait for the physical stimulus to be conveyed physically.  The mind is perceiving at an infinitely faster rate on its own.  Why then do we need the afferent and efferent nervous pathways to function?  I think because to make the vehicle take on an interaction and function of its own and interact on  the physical plan, it makes sense. 

Matthew
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
spooky2
Super Member
*****
Offline


Afterlife Knowledge Member

Posts: 2368
Re: Free Will
Reply #5 - Jan 9th, 2010 at 11:04pm
 
Dude:
I think these experiments just show nothing else than, well, what they show. There's a signal flow and a signal processing within the body. In my view it is a total mistake to try to answer mind-philosophical questions through means of natural science. I'm always saying I can think even while I'm not a brain scientist. We will never find any thought inside a brain. There a cells and what not all. But no thoughts.

   I agree with what you seem to say, in my words: Our thoughts are earth-style interpretations of what just has happened, we, so to say, tell ourselves constantly what might have happened, as Bruce described it as "the interpreter". So everything we are conscious aware of, and have structured in words (or similar bits) is always already a re-construction, or description of what initially has happened.
   Maybe you have experienced a phaenomenon like I sometimes did: You are in a meditative state and ask a question. Then you wait for the answer. Nothing happens. You try to become more clear and receptive and try again. In the moment you start (or are about) to ask your question, you notice something, a very brief subtle change, and when you focus on it in the next try, you notice it is the answer in a very compressed form. What is confusing is, that it comes before you even have ended to speak out the question, and is hard to get as it needs to be interpretated. I think this fits together with that delay of conscious thought you told of.

----------------------------------------------------

My rejection of the phrase "free will" is not related to natural science, but to my finding that "someone has free will" is contradictive, as I have laid out at the " The True Nature of Reincarnation " thread
http://afterlife-knowledge.com/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.cgi?num=1262226775/75
.

Spooky
Back to top
 

"I'm going where the pavement turns to sand"&&Neil Young, "Thrasher"
 
IP Logged
 
recoverer
Super Member
*****
Offline


Afterlife Knowledge Member

Posts: 5027
Gender: male
Re: Free Will
Reply #6 - Jan 10th, 2010 at 2:45pm
 
Perhaps this is another way to look at it.

When some people have a life review during an NDE, there ability to understand isn't limited by a biological brain. As a result, their mental capacity increases significantly and time is no longer a limiting factor. When they review their life they see it precisely as it was, not according to what their preferences dicate.

When we make use of a brain our intellectual capacity gets limited, but there are ways to move beyond such limitation. Even though I listen to my conditioning at times, I've had many moments where I've seen that in truth I'm like a soul who has a life review--I can seperate myself from my psychological conditioning and see things as they are and act accordingly.

As I stated on the reincarnation thread, it isn't a matter of being free to do whatever I want regardless of what circumstances require, it is a matter of being free to make a decision that is representative of love, honesty, and what serves the greater good.

I know of a non-dual guru who is a porn and sex addict. He doesn't do anything to change himself for the better because he doesn't believe he has free will and when he dies his consciounsess will merge with pure consciousness and that will be that. He has quite a surprise awaiting him.

We should never give up on improving our state of being with the idea that we don't have free will, because eventually, like it or not, we will have to take responsibility for our state of being.

Even if all of time happens in one moment this doesn't mean we don't have free will. It just means that many decisions are made in the same moment.
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
spooky2
Super Member
*****
Offline


Afterlife Knowledge Member

Posts: 2368
Re: Free Will
Reply #7 - Jan 10th, 2010 at 8:13pm
 
Hmm, Recoverer, I'm not convinced that it makes sense to say that there are "decisions made" while there is no time, because making a decision is a process and requires time, and in a no-time-realm everything is "there", nothing happens. In one no-time variant the past, present, maybe the future, everything would be there simultaneously. And in another variant (the one Parsons and Sylvester tell of) there is only the present, and in this present stories of a past may occur, and in this variant nothing happens as well.

Spooky
Back to top
 

"I'm going where the pavement turns to sand"&&Neil Young, "Thrasher"
 
IP Logged
 
DocM
Super Member
*****
Offline


Afterlife Knowledge Member

Posts: 2168
Re: Free Will
Reply #8 - Jan 11th, 2010 at 3:41am
 
Swedenborg addressed this issue while conversing with discarnate spirits.  He found they had no sense of linnear time, and couldn't understand it in the afterlife, having nothing currently to compare it to.  When questioned however, they told him that for spirits, there was no change of time, but there was something that came close, namely a change from one state of being to antoher. 

In spirit, they didn't measure minutes, but saw that souls evolved and moved to different vibratory levels and understandings.  This thought process, I believe is far above what Swedenborg could have made up or inferred on his own, and I myself count this as very important.  No, there was no direct sense of time in the afterlife, but spirits did evolve and change from one state of being to another.

The lack of time was almost indescribeable to ES, and he sometimes recounted what seemed to him to be hours or days of experiences, which transpired during a brief astral journey.



Matthew
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
spooky2
Super Member
*****
Offline


Afterlife Knowledge Member

Posts: 2368
Re: Free Will
Reply #9 - Jan 11th, 2010 at 7:53pm
 
Yes, that's almost exactly what I found in my "phasing-mind-journeys" as well. I still would speak of "time" over there, as at least there is still the distinction of "old, I know that, familiar" and "new, exciting, unfamiliar, learning experience, evolution", so there is an order of events, and I think it's adequate to call it "time", although it's different to the physical.

Spooky
Back to top
 

"I'm going where the pavement turns to sand"&&Neil Young, "Thrasher"
 
IP Logged
 
juditha
Ex Member


Re: Free Will
Reply #10 - Jan 12th, 2010 at 3:50pm
 
hi freewill is ours as god wanted it but i have had to wait for many years to know that i had freewill so its not easy to be able to use this freewill we are all given

when i realised i had freewill it was one of the most special times in my life,i actually walked out for the first time and everywhere i walked and everything i looked at was like i had seen it for the first time,i realised how beautiful it all was and i felt like a free spirit,i wanted to savour this moment forever.

when i married ,he took away my freewill,i was a prisoner inside my body and he had so many affairs but my mom would not help me,i lived in a lonely place and my mom would not rescue me from this man,he took away every human right that i had

i lived with hurt and being controlled all those years and then my haven came "the bowthorpe"where i was taken for mental health.

i remembered the first time i walked in there,so scared of them and the world because i did not know how to be me and what to do as i was waiting for someone there to tell if i could have a cup of tea or if i could sit outside in the garden,i did not know how to think or act on my own behalf.

no one came forward and told me what i was supposed to do,i started to feel scared so i finally got the courage to ask one of the support workers whether i could go in the kitchen and make a cup of tea,the support worker i asked told me her name was melinda,she was very nice and she took me in the kitchen and told me that i could go in there and make a drink anytime i wanted.

i just cried,i know this sounds silly but i felt scared of making my own decision,from then on melinda took me under her wing,she taught me over the months that i was special for who i was and that i have to make desisions and if i make the wrong one at times,then i have to take responsibilty for it and can only blame me

she learnt me how to use my freewill and to know that i had freewill,thats why when i took that first walk on my own it was so special as i felt for that first time that i belonged in the world.

freewill affects many lives in many different ways and for some it is harder to have freewill and for some it may come easy having freewill but life can be a hard road to walk for all of us at times but we get there in the end.

love and god bless    love juditha
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
spooky2
Super Member
*****
Offline


Afterlife Knowledge Member

Posts: 2368
Re: Free Will
Reply #11 - Jan 12th, 2010 at 11:29pm
 
Thank you, Juditha, for the impressive description of how different we can feel and perceive in different times and circumstances. In different times, we see a different amount of possibilities, of options what we can do, sometimes we feel like we're moving on railroad tracks, we don't need to think much but it's very limited and boring, and sometimes we feel like we can go wherever we want to, we feel more free, but often with a bit of anxiety and confusion about all these options we then have to think about.
   This is what I call stages of freedom, or relative freedom. There is as well a thought model of "absolute freedom", meaning absolute independence of anything, and this is meant when there is the talk of "free will" in a more philosophical way, at least from my understanding. I think this absolute freedom only God has, as we humans are always dependant on our surrounding, our personality, our history and all that.

Spooky
Back to top
 

"I'm going where the pavement turns to sand"&&Neil Young, "Thrasher"
 
IP Logged
 
balance
Junior Member
**
Offline



Posts: 63
Re: Free Will
Reply #12 - Jan 17th, 2010 at 8:13am
 
There's no such thing as free will except to say,

you can delay your path,


that's your free will in action
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
heisenberg69
Super Member
*****
Offline



Posts: 504
England
Gender: male
Re: Free Will
Reply #13 - Jan 17th, 2010 at 9:51am
 
Everyday we make a myriad of small decisions ('shall I have that last donut', 'I can't be bothered to study tonight' etc etc), both conscious and unconscious which shape our future path.Hopefully those decisions become more conscious as we gain in wisdom.

We have freewill within the reality system but not of the reality system. From my perspective these are the rules we 'sign on' for when we choose to enter the Earth-life reality system.
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
betson
Super Member
*****
Offline


Afterlife Knowledge Member

Posts: 3445
SE USA
Gender: female
Re: Free Will
Reply #14 - Jan 17th, 2010 at 10:59am
 
This is a very fine thread! 
Many thanks to you all!

Bets
Back to top
 

There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
Shakespeare
 
IP Logged
 
Pages: 1 2 
Send Topic Print


This is a Peer Moderated Forum. You can report Posting Guideline violations.