QUANT-PHAIHIST-PHOct 11, 2013

A Turing test for free will

arXiv:1310.3225v146 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses a foundational philosophical problem about human agency and consciousness, but it is incremental as it builds on existing theories of computation and free will.

The paper tackles the problem of defining free will by arguing that computational unpredictability, not quantum randomness, gives rise to the impression of free will, and proposes a Turing test for free will.

Before Alan Turing made his crucial contributions to the theory of computation, he studied the question of whether quantum mechanics could throw light on the nature of free will. This article investigates the roles of quantum mechanics and computation in free will. Although quantum mechanics implies that events are intrinsically unpredictable, the `pure stochasticity' of quantum mechanics adds only randomness to decision making processes, not freedom. By contrast, the theory of computation implies that even when our decisions arise from a completely deterministic decision-making process, the outcomes of that process can be intrinsically unpredictable, even to -- especially to -- ourselves. I argue that this intrinsic computational unpredictability of the decision making process is what give rise to our impression that we possess free will. Finally, I propose a `Turing test' for free will: a decision maker who passes this test will tend to believe that he, she, or it possesses free will, whether the world is deterministic or not.

Foundations

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