I most certainly agree that this is one of the most important metaphysical questions, but why must it be one or the other? Why not both? Why not lawfulness and chaos operating like two wings of a single bird?Obvious Leo wrote:Don't presume to instruct me in the meaning of words you sanctimonious half-wit and answer the fucking question. Do you or do you not accept that we live in a deterministic universe where effects are preceded by causes in an orderly and generative fashion?
This is the most important metaphysical question to be addressed in the entire philosophy of physics and if you can't or don't wish to offer an answer to it then please piss off out a conversation which is clearly above your pay grade.
In the British video I linked to, every physicist but one assumed knowable initial conditions, and the one that didn't assumed preexisting laws to order. All, as per your complaint against physics today, are linear thinkers. I gather from what you say that everything happens "just because." In my eyes, you and the physicists represent opposite ends of the same stick having no desire to meet somewhere in the middle.
I think the reason is clear. "Lawful unpredictability" or "patterned but unpredictable behavior" sounds too much like a "divine agent" or personality. You have so much time and energy invested in doing away with such notions that you cannot bear your respective models being challenged. Why else would anyone resort to vulgarity in order to make a point? It's childish and sounds like an act of desperation.