Do We Really Have Free Will?

No Free WillI don’t think so.

Free Will is the ability to decide and act free from the influence of past events or the environment. Free Will implies complete freedom to make absolutely any choice. If you spend a moment reflecting on this, you would appreciate why we don’t have Free Will. Because our decisions and actions are never divorced from our past or our ecosystem.

We have a conditioned mind. Our memories, past impressions and experiences bias and shape each of our thoughts and actions in the present. It’s our karmic imprint. Not just what we are born with but also what we accumulate while living. Alternatively, we can consider it the result of our genetic code, upbringing and environment. It’s our backstory.

The only way to experience Free Will is to get rid of all such conditioning; to neutralise our karmic imprint; to be independent of our psychological coding. That’s possible only if we can purify our mind by letting go of all our ego, attachments and fixed beliefs. Only when we can reside in the truth of our being. Clearly a tall order for any of us to achieve in a lifetime.

But we do have choice in most situations, right?

You could argue that the above is a rather exacting definition of Free Will. What we usually mean by Free Will is that we have a choice in most situations. Even if we may not have complete freedom to make absolutely any choice, we clearly have some choice. For example, who you choose to marry, what profession you pursue or how you react to someone’s aggression. Sounds reasonable. But here’s the catch.

While we do seemingly have a choice in most situations, our ability to make that choice too is significantly restricted by our predispositions. Our karmic imprint or our psychological coding is quite powerful and dictates the choice we make. Subconsciously, you are likely to fall in love with a person of a specific personality type; pursue a profession with certain specific rewards and characteristics.

This applies even to our ability to bring about change within ourselves. Despite a strong resolve to be calmer, kinder or less anxious, our ability to manifest that change depends, at least partly, on our emotional and mental wiring. Perhaps that’s why some people succeed in such efforts more than others.

Incidentally, a neuroscience experiment supports this idea. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences studied the role of the unconscious in simple decision-making. Using brain scans, they were able to predict participants’ decisions almost seven seconds before the participants consciously made them. It’s possible that the decisions are being made in the unconscious, but when they appear in our conscious awareness, we feel as if we are making them.

Do we have any agency?

Does this mean we have no agency to make wise choices or make positive changes? Not exactly. However, we need to be mindful of the limitations of that agency – in ourselves and in others. We need to cultivate a more balanced and nuanced relationship with the scope of that agency.

Although that’s a sobering realisation, it does not make us fatalistic. Ironically, the need to grow and evolve is also encoded in us. That’s why we find meaning in trying our best to choose well even if there’s no guarantee of the outcome of such efforts.

Implication

As we embrace these insights, we give ourselves a little less credit for our success. Instead, we are more grateful for our programming. We are also less hard on ourselves for our failings. Further, we find it easier to empathise with others. We can better relate to the challenge they experience in making desirable changes. For example, we are more compassionate towards someone dealing with anxiety and depression who despite their efforts struggles to feel positive and secure.

Of course, if you wish to expand your agency, you could explore ways to do some deeper inner work. Enhance your self-awareness and examine and reform your conditioned beliefs. Techniques like Vipassana might be of help. But then I wonder if your inclination to embark on that journey too depends on your current karmic coding!

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COMMENTS

17 Responses to “Do We Really Have Free Will?”

  1. Hetall Soni says:

    Yes, i think the agency is available with all of us. Agency to decide on what comes from within our subconscious.
    We act as if we are conditioned and programmed. And this is basis the experiences and belief system we’ve have developed since our birth.
    So when something comes from within us basis our belief system, the agency, the free will can decide whether or not to act on the insight coming from within. It’s a matter of being Conscious of a prompt and accepting the prompt of within

  2. Sharad Singh says:

    The concluding statement is very significant. Based on my experience,observation and studies I am very inconclusive on the phenomenon of Free Will. There are people who are genetically designed and endowed with capacity of making choices while others are not. Generally, we call it ‘nature’ or Swabhav of the persons.

    We should be clear about another issue. The exercise of free will should not be unnecessarily connected and evaluated with the results of the actions.

  3. Kalyanaraman M says:

    There is a Tamil adage “You can change your fate through effort, hard work”. Theory “Y” hence alludes to constancy and consistency (e.g.) keep repeating “Stay positive” more often. The opposite version is Theory X, expounded well in the article above. Karmic coding prevails !!

    Life then is a shade of grey – the accomplished fall under Theory Y. While a bunch of the others, believe in Theory X.

    Happy Dusshera to all.

    • Rajiv Vij says:

      Thanks Kalyan! The point I am trying to make is that there’s a greater contribution of the karmic coding for the ‘accomplished’ than in our society we normally give credit for. And those who supposedly accomplish less (based on the limited societal yardsticks) are not necessarily fatalistic!

  4. Veejay Nakra says:

    Brilliant article Rajiv. Although I think the inherent nature below all the layers of karmic coding created by our own actions past and present, inherited and created is the free spirit that has had the choice of free will and the unearthing of that pure free spirit is the main goal in life.

    Tough one but the main goal.

    • Rajiv Vij says:

      Thanks Veejay! Yes, that’s the goal but a super tough one, but one we have to keep striving for!

  5. MA BALASUBRAMANYA says:

    Free will succinctly elucidated. I Love your writing style. Thank you Sri Rajiv Vij for sharing

  6. Kartik Varma says:

    Research apart, my personal experience is that agency exists, and as you say, can be discovered through a series of processes humanity has refined over the millennia to know oneself. It is plenty hard work though, and not a straight path with outcomes that one plans for. Thanks for the approachable writing on this issue.

  7. Ranu Mishra says:

    My current Karmic coding is generated from my conscious choices to BE. Knowing is from the past, choosing to be that is now. Knowing is so strong that in most of the cases is resisting from moving forward. Spiritual path is indeed an uphill journey where in external slips leads to fall and the internal ones to one’s rise.
    Very relatable read.

  8. Neeloferr says:

    Thought provoking article. The karmic coding overrules and to not allow karmic coding to overrule would require deep self awareness and inspiration for spiritual growth and progress. That’s too may be in the karmic coding 🙂

  9. Priya Sharma Shaikh says:

    I’m swirling the chakravyuh of the Karmic Code 🙂 If I am to pause and for a moment leave that philosophy aside, and I do indulge in and accept my self-awareness journey and start observing my instinctive responses and the patterns of outcomes that follow – I become PRESENT to the here and now and suddenly I have the ability to make the choice of my FREE WILL to try a newer approach – presence is the agency we all have!

    • Rajiv Vij says:

      Hi Priya, great point, thanks for sharing. Yes present moment awareness is the pathway to expand our agency. The sobering question remains, despite knowing this pathway, are we able on to live in present moment awareness?

  10. Krish says:

    Ultimately things reduce to cause and effect. I have noticed that if I send a request to the Universe and then COMPLETELY forget about it, it materializes in time unexpectedly. In other words leave it to the Universe to sort things out. Does any of it make sense?

    • Rajiv Vij says:

      Hi Krish, thanks. Yes letting go of the our fixation for solving every personal challenge through our analytical mind and letting the universe play its role in its own ways is powerful. It’s truly potent when we can also let go of our attachment to a specific outcome and are open to accepting whatever the universe presents. In the knowing that whatever it presents is for our highest growth.