{"id":3499106,"date":"2023-11-17T22:03:29","date_gmt":"2023-11-17T22:03:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/?p=3499106"},"modified":"2023-12-13T17:07:20","modified_gmt":"2023-12-13T17:07:20","slug":"can-we-save-the-world-without-free-will","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/stories\/2023-11-17\/can-we-save-the-world-without-free-will\/","title":{"rendered":"Can we save the world without free will?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Many articles on environmental topics are secular homilies, bristling with shoulds and shouldn\u2019ts. Don\u2019t use a gasoline-powered <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/stories\/2023-11-01\/the-gasoline-powered-leaf-blower-as-a-metaphor-for-industrial-society\/\">leaf blower<\/a><\/u><\/span>. Buy an <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/richardheinberg.com\/museletter-313-electric-cars-rescue\">electric car<\/a><\/u><\/span> instead of a gas-powered car. Eat organically grown food. Use less water. Put solar panels on your roof. Recycle your old stuff, and be sure to put it in the right bin. If you don\u2019t behave right, we will all go to climate hell.<\/p>\n<p>But what if we humans actually don\u2019t have free will\u2014the ability to act without constraints of circumstances, necessity, or fate? Is it possible to organize mass behavioral change in its absence? Those are the questions I\u2019m asking myself as I read Robert Sapolsky\u2019s new book, <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/www.penguinrandomhouse.com\/books\/592344\/determined-by-robert-m-sapolsky\/\"><i>Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will<\/i><\/a><\/u><\/span>.<\/p>\n<p>Sapolsky is a professor of biology, neurology, and neurosurgery at Stanford University. You may know him as the author of the bestselling <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/www.penguinrandomhouse.com\/books\/311787\/behave-by-robert-m-sapolsky\/\"><i>Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst<\/i><\/a><\/u><\/span><i>, <\/i>which summarizes what science has revealed about why people do what they do.<\/p>\n<p>In <i>Determined<\/i>, Sapolsky takes on possibly the thorniest question in philosophy, psychology, and behavioral science: does free will exist? Having spent decades thinking about this question in the light of evidence from the relevant disciplines, Sapolsky has landed firmly in the \u201cno\u201d camp. And his book makes the case with thoroughness and style. I won\u2019t try to reproduce the details of his argument here; if you\u2019re not up for a slow walk through a 400-page tome, here\u2019s an <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/www.latimes.com\/science\/story\/2023-10-17\/stanford-scientist-robert-sapolskys-decades-of-study-led-him-to-conclude-we-dont-have-free-will-determined-book\">article<\/a><\/u><\/span> that offers a good summary.<\/p>\n<p>Sapolsky is a clear thinker and an accessible writer, and he\u2019s ideally qualified to ruminate on the question of whether free will exists. Nevertheless, his argument against free will has to swim upstream. Most people, including many philosophers and psychologists, refuse to share his view. Even when their own evidence and reasoning take them to the verge of concluding there\u2019s no free will, they typically stop short. \u201cNah,\u201d they say, \u201cthere\u2019s got to be free will somewhere, even if we can\u2019t find actual evidence for it.\u201d Religions and criminal justice systems are built on the assumption that we each have a little decider perched in a control room in our skull, capable of overriding hereditary, environmental, and social influences, and signaling our bodies to do the right thing. We choose our behavior, and we therefore deserve the rewards and punishments that society bestows as a result.<\/p>\n<p>Indeed, if you want to make even mild-mannered people so angry that they shout at you, just start a conversation about free will over dinner and take Sapolsky\u2019s position. In discussions with friends and colleagues about <i>Determined, <\/i>I\u2019ve yet to find anyone who fully agrees with the book\u2019s unwavering position. Maybe humanity\u2019s widespread belief in free will is determined by tradition and social necessity\u2014in which case Sapolsky\u2019s dissent could be an example of free will in action. Ugh! This whole subject gets wickedly convoluted the more you think about it.<\/p>\n<p>Sapolsky describes at length the difficulty in showing that a little decider is really there. Quantum indeterminacy, complexity theory, and chaos theory have been proposed as possible ports through which a decider can enter into our neurological machinery, but Sapolsky finds no escape hatch from determinacy in these abstruse fields. We do what we do because of where we come from, what\u2019s happened to us, and our momentary brain chemistry.<\/p>\n<p>Nevertheless, Sapolsky writes, \u201c. . . my goal isn\u2019t to convince you that there\u2019s no free will; it will suffice if you merely conclude that there\u2019s so much less free will than you thought that you have to change your thinking about some truly important things.\u201d Since the author has, in effect, given me (as a reader) an out, I prefer to remain agnostic on the question of whether there\u2019s any free will at all in the absolute sense\u2014if only to keep from alienating friends. Toward the end of this essay I\u2019ll explain my agnosticism further. But I agree with Sapolsky that a great deal of what we do individually and as societies is determined, and that the hunt for biological or behavioral evidence for the source of intent\u2014free will\u2014is frustratingly difficult and complex.<\/p>\n<p><b>Does Society as a Whole Have Free Will?<\/b><\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ve been inching toward the \u201cno free will\u201d view for the last decade or two, but by a different route than Sapolsky, and without the benefit of his immense knowledge of neuroscience. His argument is pitched mostly on the scale of the individual, via behavioral studies, genetics, and brain function. He would argue that your choice of whether to have cereal or eggs for breakfast this morning was determined by a long chain of constraints starting with biological evolution and ending with your momentary mix of neurotransmitters.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ve taken a societal-scale route, as I\u2019ve tried to better understand why humans adopted agriculture, hierarchies of inequality, colonialism, and fossil-fueled industrialism. Many other writers, like me, see these as ultimately disastrous developments, and have tried to boil them down to one or more bad ideas that mistakenly caught on with certain people back along the way. In <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/centerforpartnership.org\/resources\/books\/the-chalice-and-the-blade-our-history-our-future\/\"><i>The Chalice and the Blade<\/i><\/a><\/u><\/span><i>, <\/i>Riane Eisler proposed that some folks living in the Near East thousands of years ago chose the idea of \u201cpower over,\u201d or the \u201cdominator model,\u201d as opposed to the then-universal \u201cpower with,\u201d or \u201cpartnership model.\u201d The rest is bloody history. Similarly, Daniel Quinn, in his book <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/www.ishmael.org\/books\/the-book\/\"><i>Ishmael<\/i><\/a><\/u><\/span><i>, <\/i>attributed our species\u2019 fateful shift toward animal domestication, and then agriculture and war, to the rise of \u201ctakers\u201d over \u201cleavers.\u201d But <i>why<\/i> did these perilous ideas and behaviors take hold? Why there, why then? Presumably, these people\u2019s free will led them astray.<\/p>\n<p>No, in my view there was an inevitability to it all. Once <i>this<\/i> happened, <i>that<\/i> almost surely followed. Given our species\u2019 linguistic and tool-making abilities, and a bit of help from a stabilized climate, it was certain that we humans would occupy more and more territory. Then, once tribes started bumping into each other and competing for choice foraging land, it was inevitable that, in some places at least, weapons would become more sophisticated and groups would get bigger and more hierarchical. Then the biggest groups with the best weapons would overtake the rest. Add capitalism (itself the result of a determined causal chain) and fossil fuels, and soon we have overpopulation, a <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/www.commondreams.org\/opinion\/why-2-is-the-most-dangerous-number-no-one-is-talking-about\">massive toxic chemicals crisis<\/a><\/u><\/span>, and climate change. It didn\u2019t take \u201cbad\u201d people to do any of this. All it took was \u201cgood\u201d people responding to necessity using the mindsets that past experience had given them.<\/p>\n<p>The most prominent recent book to advance the idea of societal free will is <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/us.macmillan.com\/books\/9780374157357\/thedawnofeverything\"><i>The Dawn of Everything<\/i><\/a><\/u><\/span><i> <\/i>by David Graeber and David Wengrow (by the way, all three of the books I\u2019ve just mentioned, by Eisler, Quinn, and Graeber\/Wengrow, are worth reading and make some excellent points). The assumption that we have free will\u2014at both the individual and societal levels\u2014permeates every page of <i>Dawn<\/i>. We can choose to be hierarchical or egalitarian. We can choose to have democracy or tyranny. We can choose whether or not to have slavery. The overall shape of society is entirely malleable; we get to decide.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s an inviting idea. But <i>Dawn <\/i>has been <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/theecologist.org\/2021\/dec\/17\/all-things-being-equal\">criticized<\/a><\/u><\/span> by several expert reviewers for ignoring key evidence and mishandling much of the evidence the authors do cite. Specifically, Graeber and Wengrow argue that the rise of economic inequality in early human societies was essentially just a choice by some people to take advantage of others, whereas the evidence instead suggests that inequality emerged through intergroup competition as humans spread across more territory\u2014i.e., that inequality emerged as a solution to problems, and was <i>determined <\/i>by circumstance. This evidence has been discussed at length by, for example, James C. Scott in <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/yalebooks.yale.edu\/book\/9780300240214\/against-the-grain\/\"><i>Against the Grain<\/i><\/a><\/u><\/span><i>. <\/i>But Graeber and Wengrow deal with this evidence by mostly just sidestepping it. In short, rather than having an enormous palette of choices to pick from at any time, each human society faces options that are constrained by environment, history, and neighboring societies.<\/p>\n<p>An example I often cite has to do with consumerism. Environmentalists have long argued against unbridled consumption, given that we live on a finite planet with limited natural resources and ever fewer places to dump waste. Often, consumerism is regarded as a personal failing, of the kind that drug addiction is often assumed to be. The solution? We just have to become better people, ones who buy only what we really need.<\/p>\n<p>But the history of consumerism paints a very different picture. It arose as a strategy on the part of government and industry leaders to solve the problems of underinvestment and unemployment during the Great Depression. Society faced a crisis\u2014idle factories and millions without work. The answer was obvious: encourage more consumption through advertising, consumer credit, and planned obsolescence. But once society began to depend on the constant growth of consumer spending, other options\u2014for individuals and for society as a whole\u2014were cut off. So, today, no American politician will publicly argue for <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/degrowth.info\/degrowth\">degrowth<\/a><\/u><\/span>, even in the face of rampant environmental destruction, because stopping the consumerist juggernaut would likely lead to mass unemployment, an even bigger explosion of government debt than we are already seeing, and widespread business failures. Yes, there are ways to degrow the economy that might <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/stories\/2023-02-21\/degrowth-the-path-to-a-better-life\/\">avoid some of the worst of those effects<\/a><\/u><\/span>, and the economy will eventually shrink anyway due to environmental limits. But, for now, we\u2019re tied to the manic, accelerating conveyor belt of consumerism; it is a thoroughly determined characteristic of the American economic system. Consumerism isn\u2019t just an aberrant mindset that some people adopt as a result of watching too many commercials; it\u2019s a way of organizing the economy that solves real problems and that will therefore be difficult to dislodge\u2014until it no longer solves problems, including the rapidly worsening problems it self-generates.<\/p>\n<p>The more I know, the more I tend to see the world this way. Why are American politics so polarized and dysfunctional? It\u2019s the result of a chain of causes and effects explored brilliantly by complexity scientist Peter Turchin in his recent book <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/stories\/2023-07-19\/are-these-the-end-times\/\"><i>End Times<\/i><\/a><\/u><\/span><i>. <\/i>I sympathize with those who ask, \u201cCan\u2019t we Americans all just be nicer to each other and listen more?\u201d But such calls for free-will-based changes of heart are likely to fail until we better understand the causal chain that got us to where we are.<\/p>\n<p>Societies evolve the way species do, as <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/wwnorton.com\/books\/The-Social-Conquest-of-Earth\/\">E. O. Wilson<\/a><\/u><\/span> and other scientists who study both humans and other species have tended to conclude. Species can develop surprising abilities and admirable characteristics; but sometimes they evolve into a cul-de-sac of collapse as a result of <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Maladaptation\">maladaptation<\/a><\/u><\/span>. The same with human societies.<\/p>\n<p>But where does that leave us when we need to persuade lots of people to quickly do something to stop climate change? Should we just clam up and accept our collective fate?<\/p>\n<p><b>Determined Minds Can Change<\/b><\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s natural to assume that if people believe they have no free will, they will feel less responsible for their actions. They will be more fatalistic and less motivated to change their own behavior in order to help society as a whole. If that\u2019s true, then Sapolsky\u2019s book could not have come at a worse time.<\/p>\n<p>But Sapolskly argues that there is little reliable evidence that disbelief in free will is incapacitating. There does seem to be some statistical correlation between disbelief in free will and clinical depression (tellingly, Sapolsky reveals that he\u2019s dealt with depression for decades). However, he cites studies showing that people suffering from depression often have a more accurate view of reality than those who see the world through rose-tinted glasses.<\/p>\n<p>Change is certainly possible without free will. Organisms change all the time, even when their actions can be shown, through detailed knowledge of causal chains involving neurons and neurotransmitters, to be entirely predictable and determined. After all, the environment is always changing, and organisms must adapt quickly, moment by moment, to take advantage of opportunities and minimize risks.<\/p>\n<p>So, free will isn\u2019t required for us to alter behavior on a mass scale so as to minimize climate destabilization and other existential environmental threats. In theory, new information about the worsening impacts of global warming and the loss of wild nature, or better ways of spreading that information, could cause millions or billions of people to shift their behavior rapidly even if they don\u2019t have little independent deciders in their skulls.<\/p>\n<p>Some of us will be primed by genes, experience, and brain chemistry to understand the situation and respond sooner than others. Others will deny what is happening because genes, experience, and their internal cocktail of neurotransmitters have set them up to do so.<\/p>\n<p>And that\u2019s the situation in which we find ourselves: some of us argue for strenuous action to avert the worst, while others don\u2019t even believe there\u2019s a problem.<\/p>\n<p><b>So, What\u2019s the Difference?<\/b><\/p>\n<p>Disbelief in free will may not make it easier or harder for us to stop climate change. But it does make a big difference in our attitude toward others. If we believe that other people do things we disapprove of because their internal deciders are perverse, we may feel that punishment is in order. If these people persist in their wrong-headedness, we may regard them as evil and worthy of contempt or even extermination. Whereas in reality we are all just responding to the cues of our past and present environment, using the biological equipment with which we\u2019ve been supplied. That\u2019s why Sapolsky thinks a world without belief in free will would be a more compassionate world.<\/p>\n<p>Many societies emphasize retribution. People sometimes behave terribly, and many of us get pleasure from seeing bad things happen to people who act in ways we don\u2019t like. Historically, punishments were often far more gory and painful than the behaviors that were being punished. But gradually, here and there, people have come to see that harsh punishments aren\u2019t very effective in deterring bad behavior, but instead turn the punishers themselves into monsters. As an example, Sapolsky cites the history of capital punishment\u2014from horrific medieval public spectacles of drawing and quartering, to public hangings, to private hangings, to executions via electric chair, to lethal injection, to abolition of the death penalty. He points out that, in regions that are less religious and where people tend not to believe so much in free will (e.g., Scandinavia), sentences for crimes are less retributive and more geared simply to protecting the public and providing the offender with positive reinforcement for prosocial behavior. Moreover, crime rates remain lower in those countries than in ones that practice retributive punishment, like the United States. Even if we know that a serial killer was acting as the result of terrible abuse in childhood, it still makes sense to stop him from doing more harm. But the more we know, the less we feel what Sapolsky calls \u201cthe joy of punishment.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a name=\"_GoBack\"><\/a> The same goes for rewards. If we believe in the little internal decider, then we are more likely to heap honors and riches on individuals who do something admirable. If we don\u2019t believe, we\u2019re more likely to think of those individuals as fortunate for having had the genes and experience that led them to do the admirable thing. But we\u2019re less likely to think that the fortunate person deserves even more fortune. Therefore, a society that doesn\u2019t believe in free will may be less likely to tolerate economic inequality, while a society that does believe may be more likely to think that extreme inequality is simply evidence of people getting what they deserve (caste systems that assign people privilege or poverty based on their circumstances of birth are even more unfair, but require a separate discussion since difference in social status is not tied to people\u2019s behavior).<\/p>\n<p>The case against free will isn\u2019t a case against morals: it still makes sense to teach children in ways that will help them be more compassionate, creative, happy, and successful. That\u2019s part of their conditioning, and you\u2019re more likely to raise kids that way if you were parented similarly.<\/p>\n<p>I write environmental books and articles, drive an electric car instead of a gas-powered car, have solar panels on my roof, eat organically grown food, and recycle old stuff as a result of genetics, environment, and experience. I don\u2019t deserve a medal for any of this. But, by the same token, the next person doesn\u2019t deserve censure because she instead drives a giant gas-guzzling SUV, takes jet vacations to Las Vegas, and goes online every day to buy lots of stuff she doesn\u2019t really need. She is who she is because of her own unique mix of genes and experiences. The kinds of behaviors just mentioned will need to be systematically discouraged by society, if we\u2019re to survive this century\u2019s <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/www.postcarbon.org\/publications\/welcome-to-the-great-unraveling\/\">polycrisis<\/a><\/u><\/span>. But it\u2019s nothing personal.<\/p>\n<p>Identifying others as villains and seeking to punish them may be a successful strategy for organizing a coup, insurrection, or revolution\u2014i.e., for taking power from others who currently have it. But it\u2019s a lousy strategy for building a better society or solving a problem like climate change, because it alienates and possibly injures lots of people and turns you into a self-righteous punisher.<\/p>\n<p><b>A Useful Illusion\u2014Sometimes?<\/b><\/p>\n<p>Now, back to my professed agnosticism regarding free will. I\u2019ve taken Sapolsky\u2019s side in this discussion because I think his position deserves an airing. However, as I\u2019ve mentioned already, there are plenty of philosophers and psychologists\u2014even neuroscientists\u2014who disagree with him. In his critical <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/magazine\/2023\/11\/13\/determined-a-science-of-life-without-free-will-robert-sapolsky-book-review?utm_source=nl&amp;utm_brand=tny&amp;utm_mailing=TNY_Daily_110823&amp;utm_campaign=aud-dev&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_term=tny_daily_digest&amp;bxid=5dfabbc3fc942d641a1b9fd8&amp;cndid=63289662&amp;hasha=7972647758562953e9217e301f3b2788&amp;hashb=786f8fed076c0f56f4676a132649a1ab747f913e&amp;hashc=6c5d821192c36a9849cb95b0ec11bc077b92f0056978d30068e680ee30bd9c91&amp;esrc=AUTO_PRINT\">review<\/a><\/u><\/span> of <i>Determined, <\/i>philosopher Nikhil Krishnan makes some good points, based largely on matters of definition and degree. Krishnan and others say we need at least the illusion of free will in order to maintain our \u201cmoral vocabulary.\u201d Maybe Sapolsky is right in the science (his critics can\u2019t point to how, when, or where free will enters our neurocircuitry), but we needn\u2019t be thoroughly convinced; maybe it\u2019s enough for his evidence to expand our compassion for others. Full determinism may be too far a shore for society as a whole. Moreover, we should perhaps keep an open mind simply because science is a work in progress.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ve argued that it\u2019s\u00a0a mistake to lavish as much attention and wealth on the fortunate few as we do today, especially in America. But sometimes we need inspiration from others who seem to overcome all the barriers that life puts in their way. One of my heroes in this regard is <span style=\"color: #0563c1;\"><u><a href=\"https:\/\/www.louisianamusicfactory.com\/product\/terry-teachout-pops-a-life-of-louis-armstrong-book\/\">Louis Armstrong<\/a><\/u><\/span>, who grew up in abject poverty amid harsh racial discrimination, but went on to become one of the 20<sup>th<\/sup> century\u2019s greatest musicians and a cultural icon\u2014by all accounts a generous, hard-working man who gave millions joy while breaking racial barriers on behalf of himself and others. Was he an example of free will in action? His life story shines brighter when we assume so\u2014even if it\u2019s possible to point to a few key early mentors and benefactors who may have made the difference between a life of achievement and upliftment, and one of degradation and failure.<u> <\/u><\/p>\n<p>Finally, to address the question that is the title of this article: can we save the world without free will? In principle, yes. But time will tell just how much of the world actually can be saved at this point. Those of us who understand the situation must, and will, continue warning others. We can\u2019t help ourselves; that\u2019s what we\u2019re primed to do. I, for one, will use every persuasive technique I know to change as many minds as I possibly can. However, <i>on a mass<\/i> <i>scale<\/i>, minds will probably change only as circumstances change.<\/p>\n<p>That may not be a satisfying answer to my question. But reality isn\u2019t required to conform with our desires, whether they\u2019re freely willed or not.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Many articles on environmental topics are secular homilies, bristling with shoulds and shouldn\u2019ts. Don\u2019t use a gasoline-powered leaf blower. Buy an electric car instead of a gas-powered car. &#8230; If you don\u2019t behave right, we will all go to climate hell.  But what if we humans actually don\u2019t have free will\u2014the ability to act without constraints of circumstances, necessity, or fate? Is it possible to organize mass behavioral change in its absence? <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":128243,"featured_media":3499107,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[213524,213535],"tags":[169626,251958,89036],"class_list":["post-3499106","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-editors-picks","category-society-featured","tag-buildingaresilientsociety","tag-free-will","tag-society"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3499106","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/128243"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3499106"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3499106\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/3499107"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3499106"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3499106"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3499106"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}