Politics: Free Will
This is not about a whale.
Philosophers have debated whether man has "free will" for centuries... millennia. We will not cover all of the possibilities here... there is just too much speculation.
Let's go to a more practical level... one of choices. If free will means freedom to choose, then we all have it... assuming that there isn't some grand "puppet master" who is fooling us into thinking that what choose is really what we choose.
But choice alone isn't really enough. We can choose to live forever or float unaided from mountain tops... but the reality of our condition makes those choices meaningless... or at least the limits the effectiveness of our choices.
Let's go back to yesterday's post. When the young marine shot the wounded Iraqi insurgent who had suddenly moved when the marines in the room presumed the men on the floor were all dead... how much free will did he have? Of course, he could have chosen not to shoot... or could he?
What choices were "free will" choices for this young marine? Well, apparently, he chose to join the marines without coercion. So let's mark up one for free will. Perhaps he was given a choice of specialties within the marines, so let's mark up one for limited free will... he couldn't choose anything... only those specialties for which he was "qualified" (e.g., he didn't qualify for aviator).
From that point on, we was assigned to his unit and to his duty station. He was assigned to combat duty in Iraq. He was ordered into combat duty in Falluja. He was ordered into house-to-house combat with his buddies. He was trained to protect himself and his buddies... and to kill any enemy that threatened him or his buddies. He was made aware of the tactics used by the enemy... which included suicide bombing and booby-trapping dead bodies.
So, when the young marine entered the room where he shot the Iraqi insurgent/terrorist, his only choice was to shoot the man who suddenly moved among the dead bodies or put his life and the life of his buddies in jeopardy.
Therefore, the question is: did this young marine have a choice based on free will... or did he have no real choice at all? My guess is those who have never been faced with such a situation will say, "We always have a choice."
Do we?