Barry,

Your post is on point for a few reasons. One, I am crazy about proprioceptive 
exercises. My living room looks like a training camp for Cirque! Plus I have 
had to spend some time in assisted living facilities for personal and 
professional reasons lately so this is an up topic for me.

I am still sorting out what the positions are with regard to free will so this 
is my best guess. I believe you are continuing to make the intuitive case FOR 
free will. This is exactly why we believe in free will. We are obviously able 
to influence our unconscious processes through such things as exercises and 
this will influence our future positively. It all makes perfect sense until we 
look at what actually happens in the lives of the elderly.

First, other than a suicidal person (and there are some in these homes but not 
many) there is no reason for an older person to FREELY CHOOSE to fall down and 
hurt themselves.

Second, It seems logical that if this exercise could help them choose not to 
fall, they would all be doing them.

Last, they don't! I have been preaching this message to my Dad for years and he 
buys into it even. His physical therapist preaches this message to every person 
in his facility. But if you talk with any therapist in a facility you will 
uncover their frustration that they cannot get the residents to do their 
exercises once they are out of his or her sight. Everyone believes this is a 
good idea and if the elderly could truly freely choose they would. But they 
cannot because their choices are not free. They are determined by a lifetime of 
not exercising this way. (This is a cautionary time to automate this activity 
now before auto pilot removes this choice.)

But check this out. I can only act this way myself because of a habit I formed 
long ago. I am not freely choosing this behavior to affect myself in the 
future, it is just the luck of the draw that I happened to be a skier and got a 
bolo board as a kid and then happened to continue to buy them as I got older. I 
never fell off one and hurt myself which might have derailed my owning one now. 
So all those events conspired to make it mandatory for me to act the way I do. 
So can I claim free will, really? What is different between me and everyone 
else who would benefit from this exercise? The influences from my past which I 
am not choosing to abide by in the present, they compel me.


Have  a great time in Amsterdam where your free choices will be challenged by a 
cornucopia of delights. Can we predict which ones you will "freely" choose? 

 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <turquoiseb@...> wrote :

 I'm going to be in Amsterdam today and thus not following FFL, but I thought 
I'd use my free will :-) to throw out one last set of thoughts that your 
writings on the free will issue have triggered in me. 

 

 Probably because I just finished writing a short article about proprioception, 
in my mind many of these supposed neurological studies about whether we have 
free will link with that phenomenon in my mind. I think that the 
neuroscientists might be confusing the distinction between *conscious* 
decision-making and *unconscious* decision-making when trying to "prove" their 
contention that we have no free will. *Both* forms of decision-making are 
present at all times. 

 

 It has been estimated that fewer than 1% of the mind-body processes that keep 
us alive ever register as conscious thoughts in the human mind. You don't have 
to consciously try to breathe, or to keep your heart beating. Similarly, in 
most cases you don't consciously have to try to keep your balance, because your 
proprioceptive system (in conjunction with the vestibular system and the visual 
system) enable you to do so without your conscious mind having to get involved. 
Specialized proprioceptor nerve cells transmit and receive signals to and from 
the cerebellum, reacting to changing stimuli (like "Am I walking on a slippery 
surface?") from the muscles, tendons, joints, and skin. The cerebellum 
processes the incoming information -- literally millions of such impulses per 
hour -- and calculates how the muscles should react to the changing stimuli, 
and with how much force to (for example) keep your balance. 

 

 Interestingly, however, just as cognitive functions start to deteriorate with 
age, so does your proprioceptive system. This is the reason why the number one 
cause of hospital admissions in the elderly is falls. Their proprioceptive 
system starts to fail, and thus they can no longer keep their balance any more, 
and they fall and injure themselves. 

 

 This is where the free will rap comes into the picture for me. The 
proprioceptive system doesn't *have* to fail as you age. Doctors have found 
that if they can urge the aging person to perform a couple of minutes of 
balancing exercises per day, they can both keep their balance from failing, and 
"bring it back" if it had already begun to fail. Just intentionally walking on 
uneven surfaces or balancing on a bongo board or a BOSU can drastically reduce 
their likelihood of falling and injuring themselves. In a way, this is a 
parallel to mental exercises like doing crossword puzzles, which can delay or 
reverse the failing of cognitive functioning we see in senility. 

 

 The "free will" aspect of this I see is that the elderly person still has a 
choice. They could *not* do the simple exercises for a couple of minutes a day, 
and thus watch their sense of balance continue to erode, or they *could* do 
them, and watch it come back. And none of this requires any conscious decisions 
like "Oh, I am listing to the right so I should move my upper body to the left 
to retain balance." It just happens automatically, because the proprioceptive 
system is healthier. 

 

 The "free will" involved in my opinion is whether the elderly person is 
willing to improve their lot by following the doctors' advice or not. If they 
are, their balance will improve. If they're not, it won't, and will continue to 
degrade. THAT is a conscious free will decision, on the basis of which 
literally millions of unconscious decisions relating to balance change. 

 

 You may not find this interesting, but I did, so I just thought I'd throw it 
out. 

 

 This is one of the reasons I'm not as impressed by neurological tests that 
show a "lag time" between a stimulus appearing and recognition of it happening 
in the conscious mind. Stimuli becoming *consciously* recognized is 
neurologically a very slow process *anyway*, and in many cases is simply not 
necessary for the body to react properly to the stimulus. So using "when the 
person becomes consciously aware that they have made a decision" as a "test" of 
free will seems to me to be fatally flawed from the outset. The example is (in 
a healthy person) placing your finger on a hot stove by accident. Your body 
jerks your finger away long before your mind has even consciously noticed that 
your finger is burning. That does NOT in my opinion mean that you don't have 
the ability to make conscious decisions about choices that HAVE reached your 
conscious mind. An example of the latter is doing balance exercises to improve 
one's failing sense of balance -- that is a conscious decision, and one's 
future very much depends on it. No fate or determinism involved. 
 

 That's all. Now I'm off to have some breakfast and head into Amsterdam for the 
day. Jai and away, and thanks again for all the delightful conversation. If 
nothing else, our conversations should prove to a few people here that it is 
possible to disagree without the disagreement becoming a drama queen moment.  
:-)  :-)  :-)
 

 

  



Reply via email to