Physics of Free Will - a refutation


The blog article below was posted before I attended the lecture described.  The story of what occurred there, Science and Mysticism, was posted to a public website that received over two hundred comments. 

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 Oct 12, 2015

This is prompted by a lecture on the title subject at UCSD, which I choose to exercise my free will to provide to attendee's the case that the premise is not only incorrect, but an affront to the most profound elements of the enlightenment, the long slow ascendance of scientific research of ignorance.   This lecture is given by a tenured professor at a respected public academic institution, which makes it that much more egregious.

Of course, my making this case to this audience is similar to my standing up at St. Patrick's Cathedral and accusing the Pope of revering one as the son of God, who is just a human being like the rest of us.  It would not play well to that audience.  And those attending this lecture here are part of our culture, one that enjoys fantasy and reveres those who have appeared to master the mysteries of the universe.

First, the name of the lecture is inherently inimical to not only science, but our current civilizations stasis between faith and science.  Physics is science, FreeWill is faith, a belief.  In an article of Steven Jay Gould, a renowned biologist of the last century, he described why these must be kept separate for reasons of co-existence between faith and science, in this article  "Nonoverlapping Magisteria,"   

Physics, is a branch of science, of which a paramount rule is that any theory must be falsifiable by experiment.  Phenomenon must be amenable to operational definitions to allow reproduction of experiments for verification.  Free Will is of a different nature, fundamentally the realm of values and morals, elements dealt with by cultures and religions, not by experimental verification.  Societies that espouse free will such as Saudi Arabia and the United States, upon breach of cultural-religious norms will torture and execute the individual.  Counties that do not, such as Norway, will never cause suffering to another human being no matter what the deviation from norms or degree of suffering he has caused.

The subject of the presentation today suggests that the scientific method may be applied to determine which country is correct.  No matter how many people cheer him on it does not become true.  Majority rule has never defined true science, if it did we would still believe in possession by witches and the central place of our planet in the universe.  However,  we do have evidence that mass movements can germinate, and grow, and take over entire countries and culture ----irrespective of the validity of their premises.  Sadly, this lecture illustrates one we are now  living through. 
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Addenda: This forgoing is written after attendance at above lecture at various times

Needing support for my challenging Professor Keating from someone with credentials,  I wrote this email to a man who only had months to live, who had been my neighbor for ten years:
Wesley A Clark
I had almost begun to think I'd never be hearing from my old friend again, my neighbor across the hall in the Big Apple; but Al, I'd lost the iMac file that held our exchange of email correspondence, a matter of clumsy-finngers, I suppose … partially paralyzed left-hand.

Restart

Good Sir Alvin of Rodbell,

I'm delighted to hear from you again, and you get full marks for refusing to leave the UCSD meeting out there on the left coast in San Diego! Of course I read your essay, pointing out why the lecturer's emphasis was so far off base. Your logic is faultless.

Mine, in a related form: I believe that there are at least as many Gods as there are people in the world, and I don't believe in any of them (which makes me a poly-atheist). In any case, count me among the many readers who admire your great writing skill!

There's more I wanted to write here, but this will have to do for a re-opener. I have to take myself down to a holiday party in the lobby of our Brooklyn apartment building for the annual NAM festivities.

Best of all possible wishes,

-- Wes

This was his obituary in the New York Times, and there will never be a description of such an accomplishment ever again:  Wesley A. Clark, Who Designed First Personal Computer, Dies at 88

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I viewed with care this two hour video of  what was described as: 

The Arthur C. Clarke Center for Human Imagination (at UCSD) will have a panel discussion on 8/6/15 o the subject of  The Physics of Free Will.   The event will be a discussion about what modern physics has to say about the concept of free will, including perspectives from the foundations of quantum mechanics, cosmology, and speculations about the role of of conscious observers in the cosmos.  Discussants were Brian Keating (Physics, UC San Diego), Andrew Friedman (Astronomy, MIT), and David Brin (Hugo & Nebula Award Winning Author).

One option that was seriously considered by at least two of the discussants was that our existence was as creations of a massive simulation, with common elements of the film, "The Matrix."  Dr. Keatings presentation was similar to the one I attended, but with more detail of the relationship between Physics and Free Will beginning at about 35 minutes into the video.   Dr, Keating uses a quip during these lectures that always brings a laugh, "The slide of the group of undergrads, grad students and post docs, is proof that there is no "free will."  He chooses not to explore how the dynamics of absorbing and accepting of academic values, that does not end when his collection of obedient individuals reaches a level of authority,  can perpetuate error that eventually becomes part of a Zeitgeist. 


Hour long video of lecture by Dr. Keating, "Physics of Free Will" (not the specific one I attended) 

Lee Smolin is one of the most articulate theoretical physicists who challenge in his many books and articles the mystification of deviation from historical restraints that have given legitimacy to science itself over the last centuries.

Excerpt from article by Sean Carroll, an eminent theoretical physicist, on limits of expert views:

Physics is the easiest subject of all, which is why we know enormously more about it than any other science. The social sciences deal with fantastically more complicated subjects, about which it’s very naturally more difficult to make definitive statements, especially statements that represent counterintuitive discoveries. The esoteric knowledge that social scientists undoubtedly possess, therefore, doesn’t translate directly into actionable understanding of the world, in the same way that physicists are able to help get a spacecraft to the moon.

There is a final point that is much trickier: political inclinations and other non-epistemic factors color our social-scientific judgments, for experts as well as for novices. On a liberal/conservative axis, most sociologists are to the left of most economists. (Training as an economist allegedly makes people more selfish, but there are complicated questions of causation there.) Or more basically, social scientists will often approach real-world problems from the point of view of their specific discipline, in contrast with a broader view that the non-expert might find more relevant. (Let’s say the death penalty does deter crime; is it still permissible on moral grounds?) Natural scientists are blissfully free from this source of bias, at least most of the time. Evolution would be the obvious counterexample.

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