I just wanted to raise this subject outside of the existing thread about the Christian perspective of Free Will, in order to explore a more general spiritual view.
Here's the first thing - even since being a child, I had a sense of predestination, as if there were areas of my future that were already predetermined and I was going to move to.
The idea of a "path" - of following a certain life path, serves as a good analogy.
The impression has always been that I am on a general path that will pass through major destinations, but that there are sometimes minor differences in how I reach those destinations - as if my exercise of "Free Will" remains very limited.
Here's a bigger issue, though.
I treat intuition as a powerful spiritual signal - like being tapped into the universe. I feel obliged to obey my intuition, because it is right. However, in doing so, it's as if I'm giving up my "Free Will" - because the only choice is a Hobson's Choice - I must obey. Why? To make my life easier, or to fulfill a higher purpose?
In that regard, it reminds me of how Judaism describes Angels as being without Free Will. It makes me wonder that the closer you move towards the spiritual, the more you recognise a higher power, and realise that there are decisions laid out for you that should be followed. Is what Judaism was saying?
Also, on Free Will in general - if we presume for a moment it exists, then I don't think most people use it in most situations, but instead run on a dimmed version which is driven by routine and choices based on routine, because it is easier and simpler to. After all, if you exert Free Will in any individual moment, there are a huge myriad of options you could follow.
For example, I am sat here typing. If I stop, there are so many decisions available - not so much a decision between a couple of decisions based on experience, biological programming, and perceptual sets, as much as decisions I can create. Do I want to twitch a part of my body? If so, what part? There are a variety of objects on my desk - shall I pick one up and use one? In a normal manner? In some other manner? Shall I stand up, jump up, hop around the room? Apparently any of us has the Free Will to make such decisions, and yet many of these choices may some odd at best, or schizophrenic at worst.
In that case, perhaps it can be said that normally we have very little use of Free Will in life under ordinary circumstances, and practice only a very diminished form.
In which case, if my intuition says to do something and I feel compelled to follow it, then does that mean that the best use of Free Will is to subjugate it in the first place to a perceived higher process?
(Probably not written this post very well, but hopefully something in there for discussion).
Here's the first thing - even since being a child, I had a sense of predestination, as if there were areas of my future that were already predetermined and I was going to move to.
The idea of a "path" - of following a certain life path, serves as a good analogy.
The impression has always been that I am on a general path that will pass through major destinations, but that there are sometimes minor differences in how I reach those destinations - as if my exercise of "Free Will" remains very limited.
Here's a bigger issue, though.
I treat intuition as a powerful spiritual signal - like being tapped into the universe. I feel obliged to obey my intuition, because it is right. However, in doing so, it's as if I'm giving up my "Free Will" - because the only choice is a Hobson's Choice - I must obey. Why? To make my life easier, or to fulfill a higher purpose?
In that regard, it reminds me of how Judaism describes Angels as being without Free Will. It makes me wonder that the closer you move towards the spiritual, the more you recognise a higher power, and realise that there are decisions laid out for you that should be followed. Is what Judaism was saying?
Also, on Free Will in general - if we presume for a moment it exists, then I don't think most people use it in most situations, but instead run on a dimmed version which is driven by routine and choices based on routine, because it is easier and simpler to. After all, if you exert Free Will in any individual moment, there are a huge myriad of options you could follow.
For example, I am sat here typing. If I stop, there are so many decisions available - not so much a decision between a couple of decisions based on experience, biological programming, and perceptual sets, as much as decisions I can create. Do I want to twitch a part of my body? If so, what part? There are a variety of objects on my desk - shall I pick one up and use one? In a normal manner? In some other manner? Shall I stand up, jump up, hop around the room? Apparently any of us has the Free Will to make such decisions, and yet many of these choices may some odd at best, or schizophrenic at worst.
In that case, perhaps it can be said that normally we have very little use of Free Will in life under ordinary circumstances, and practice only a very diminished form.
In which case, if my intuition says to do something and I feel compelled to follow it, then does that mean that the best use of Free Will is to subjugate it in the first place to a perceived higher process?
(Probably not written this post very well, but hopefully something in there for discussion).