A Deterministic Model of Free Will
Tim Palmer

TL;DR
This paper develops a deterministic model of free will based on concepts of information initialization and upscale control, arguing that free will can exist within a deterministic framework and has implications for quantum physics experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a novel deterministic model of free will incorporating Planck-scale information dynamics and upscale control, challenging traditional views on predestination.
Findings
Determinism does not imply predestination in the proposed model.
The model explains how free decisions can be made using past experiences.
Violating measurement independence does not negate free will according to the model.
Abstract
The issue of whether we make decisions freely has vexed philosophers for millennia, Resolving this is vital for solving a diverse range of problems, from the physiology of how the brain makes decisions (and how we assign moral responsibility to those decisions) to the interpretation of experiments on entangled quantum particles. A deterministic model of free will is developed, based on two concepts. The first generalises the notion of initialisation of nonlinear systems where information cascades upscale from the Planck scale, exemplified by the chaology of colliding billiard balls, and featured in the author's Rational Quantum Mechanics. With `just-in-time' initialisation, such Planck-scale information is only initialised when it is needed to describe super-Planck scale evolution, and not e.g., at the time of the Big Bang. In this way determinism does not imply predestination and a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFree Will and Agency · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · stochastic dynamics and bifurcation
