I think the last line of my post sums up the distinction, and why I make it. Simply speaking, when I refer to free will, I am refering to it in a sitiuation with minimal consequence or significance. The examples I use are (apparently) devoid of specific or differntiating consequence. This is not a distinction that I'm asking others to necessarily embrace, just a clarification of my concept of free will.
Actually the last line of your post was:
I would feel so much better about that band if it was a girl singing that high...
Am I then to understand that this statement some how sums up the distinction??
I'm only kidding. I think I came to an understanding of the distinction, and would quite naturally agree with this distinction made. Significance that is determined by weight of potential consequences very much so affects the freedom of the will.
So there! Simply put, I see the added weight of potential consequence as a hinderence on free will. You need not see things that way.
Oh but I do see it that way. Although I think I would word it as you just have, rather than using significance as you originally did. It may just be me, but I think using significance seems to give the false idea tha some manner of value (which may or may not be subjective) is a determining factor on the freedom of the will in question.
Yet, all in all, I think I understand what you meant by significance and agree completely...I was just working it out for my own clarification really.
If you want to include will within the definition, then perhaps you're just looking for a definition of "free"?
Yes. I think that is an astute observation. No one would disagree that all humans have a will. We must have a will to act, as we will to act. Yet, the debate is really over how free or hindered this will is from outside influences as well as inside.
Therefore, I do believe discussing what is meant by 'free' would be the next step having established a working definition.
Obviously you think that the idea of what you will (flavors of icecream/whether or not to cancel your benefits package) is determined somewhat by a consideration of the consequences of that decision. You would not cancel the benefits package if you were to truly value the long term effects over that of the short term extra pocket change; no more than you would choose mint chocolate chip knowing full well that it is utterly repulsive to you.
Therefore I think we could establish that our desires determine what is willed. Would you agree?
I would hope that you would not assume that the will is so completely unaffected by anything at all; much like Alice at the crossroads (desiring to go no which way in particular, therefore not going at all). As if the will was unaffected and undetermined by no thing in particular it would be random chance that would decide which direction the will 'chooses' to go. You would not choose vanilla over chocolate because you like it more, you would rather choose vanilla over chocolate because the random fall of the die fell upon that choice rather than the latter.
Would we agree that this type of completely free will is incomprehensible?
I would also think we would agree that the will is not so determined as to be nothing more than a secondary action of a higher force or greater being. God (and I use God as I am a Christian, you may think of this label as a higher force if you so desire not to believe in God) is not moving your will in either direction based upon His desires or upon some outside purpose.
I would deny this because of reasoning that the Scripture portrays God as a perfectly good being, therefore incapable of sinning; and moving a will in the direction of sin would be classified as sinning.
Yet, while I assume you would not agree with this manner of completely determined will, I would ask why not. Why would you find this complete hindrence to be incomprehensible (if in fact you think so)?
If we can eliminate the two outside extremes, I think it would narrow our working idea of the freedom of this beast in question.