Chester wrote:
If I am free to learn stuff then I am free to change my desires. For instance, if I discovered that a particular act that I love doing is causing me damage I may cease to love doing it...I can adapt my will to reality.Being able to make choices based on reality is freedom.
I really think that you if stopped for 5 minutes to think about this stuff you'd agree that we do not have free will and that what you are defending most of the time is not free will but something else. Being able to make choices based on reality is freedom, not free will. Furthermore, it's only freedom in the sense that you are not being coerced by someone else.
Anyway, if you discover that a particular action you like doing is actually harmful, you may stop liking it.
However, the "discovering", the "liking" and the decision to stop liking are all things that are riding on top of unconscious processes. This is obvious when you think about your life retrospectively.
I really can choose what I think about and when.
Again, to claim that is to be completely out of touch with reality.
Thoughts simply arise into consciousness. And when you think about the way you think ( for instance when you decided to focus on something), that is just more thoughts. The decision to focus on something instead of what you were thinking about previously is a thought in itself similar to the previous one. Why did you decided to focus on monday but not on thursday? Why were you able to succeed in focusing on saturday but not on sunday? You cannot account for these things.
The idea that the subconscious totally controls the conscious mind is a non-starter .
The problem here is that you're thinking of a very "freudian" unconscious.
The chemical reactions in your brain are unconscious. The actions of neurotransmitters are unconscious.
You are not aware of most of what happens in your brain.
We're not just talking about daddy issues and sexual repression.