Wow, reading through this thread was like reading through some bizarre short story by Dostoevsky...
Here is an opinion piece on science and Free Will that I enjoyed reading from the
New York Times
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com...%20will&st=cse
And another great one from the NY TIMES:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/22/sc...%20will&st=cse
excerpt from the above:
''In one experiment, some people read a passage from Francis Crick, the molecular biologist, asserting that free will is a quaint old notion no longer taken seriously by intellectuals, especially not psychologists and neuroscientists. Afterward, when compared with a control group that read a different passage from Crick (who died in 2004) these people expressed more skepticism about free will — and promptly cut themselves some moral slack while taking a math test.
Asked to solve a series of arithmetic problems in a computerized quiz, they cheated by getting the answers through a glitch in the computer that they’d been asked not to exploit. The supposed glitch, of course, had been put there as a temptation by the researchers, Kathleen Vohs of the University of Minnesota and Jonathan Schooler of the University of California, Santa Barbara.
In a follow-up experiment, the psychologists gave another test in which people were promised $1 for every correct answer — and got to compile their own scores. Just as Dr. Vohs and Dr. Schooler feared, people were more likely to cheat after being exposed beforehand to arguments against free will. These people went home with more unearned cash than did the other people.....'
....'Free will guides people’s choices toward being more moral and better performers,” Dr. Vohs said. 'It’s adaptive for societies and individuals to hold a belief in free will, as it helps people adhere to cultural codes of conduct that portend healthy, wealthy and happy life outcomes.'”
So I guess, in this sense the idea has appeal...