The straight answer is that all these actions are automatic, they are done by the body, there is no "i" involved at all.
Ok, well that's succinct and straightforward. Apologies if the following seems pedantic, but I always need to really be sure that what you're telling me (and not just you, anyone that I'm guiding) is based solely on direct experience:
Please just confirm, if it's the case, that when doing any action that's undertaken, you can find no 'I', no separate self, present or doing anything; and that (for want of a better word) all actions just seem to be 'automatic', i.e. they appear to 'just happen' without the agency of any sort of controlling entity
1. I got this from a book by J Searle, a philosopher, some years ago.
Test: (i asked my friends to do this, but generally got funny looks and exclamation like, "what planet are you on?").
Put your hand up with fingers curled. Then in the next moments you can decide (when) to straighten out your index finger, and then straighten it out.
Outcome:
i) I have no idea how I made the decision to move the finger - and why at that precise moment
ii) I have no idea who or what made the decision
iii) I have no idea how "i" moved the finger
My conclusion: there is no "i" involved in the decision-making, nor in the moving.
Once satisfied that it can be seen that there's no doer to be found, I usually move on to looking at choosing/deciding, whilst noting that clearly there's quite an overlap with actions and control. Your above observations (together with the other two examples, although the one above is much better as it's current) relate much more directly to decision-making, than simple doing, and clearly indicate that you can't find a separate self as decider/chooser either, which is excellent. Anyway, the exercise is as follows:
Raise your right arm (or don’t). In that process of raising the right arm (or not), a decision is made, or at least something happens (or doesn’t). But can you pinpoint the actual moment of choice and find the actual entity that appears to be making that choice? In direct experience, can that moment of choice, that apparent chooser, actually be found? Or does the idea 'I just chose to (not) raise my right arm' come after the event itself?
Can I also ask you to have a look at the following video clip from Sam Harris:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zZLyYq_QQ ... e=youtu.be
It's really the first 35 minutes that are particularly relevant. (The q&a session that follows is interesting too, but not so much). Sam Harris talks about free will and explains clearly, logically and scientifically, why there is never an 'I' making choices and decisions There is no substitute for looking in direct experience, but this is excellent 'conventional' corroboration for what is to be found, or rather not found, in direct experience.
Finally, in my previous post I said:
You're doing great and I'm really enjoying our investigation so far Stephen. How's it going for you?
Let me know Stephen.
Pete x

