Quasimodo wrote:Your question could well be worded the other way around.
Does any reason for wanting to make a particular choice preclude free will?
Of course it could, but I asked first. It's not a question of whether free-will is precluded, it's whether we have any good reason to add it to our understanding of how we make decisions.
Also, the precedence already seems to indicate that our desires are the result of natural, biological processes. The study of culture, neurobiology, evolution, and likely other fields all seem to converge on the point that our desires are dependent on factors outside of our experience of a "choice". It doesn't follow that because a choice seems arbitrary and unquantifiable to us, that it is therefore outside the realm of natural explanation. The preference of vanilla over chocolate may be no more significant that the comparison between the length of one blade of grass to another. The lines may be blurred, but the most likely explanation for why we desire certain foods is a natural one, so it follows that our preference of one food over another can also most likely be explained naturally.
Quasimodo wrote:I think that free will is being able to opt for a particular choice without having to defer to another's wishes. The internal reason we make a particular choice is not part of the definition.
So, your definition of free-will still holds within a deterministic universe? I'm not sure I understand you correctly.