Noax wrote:The argument seems to be one from emotion. Pick my view, else I'll tell you you're a pawn.
It's not intended that way, so I trust you won't take it that way. Rather, a "pawn," by definition, is a chess piece. Chess pieces have no volition or personhood. They don't even have an emotional view of what happens to them. Rather, forces outside of them determine everything that happens to them. And in at least that respect, that's actually a pretty good analogy of the implications of Determinism.
Now, do I think it's a bad thing? Sure. But the language is not intended as an insult. Rather, it's supposed to alert you to precisely what's at stake in believing in Determinism. Essentially, I don't have to say, "You're a pawn." All that has to happen is that you realize that essentially, that's what you are saying of yourself. If you're a Determinist, you deny that "will" is a description of anything but the inevitable playing out of material forces on material persons.
But the pawn can do anything he wants within reason.
Not strictly literally true. Pawns can't "want." Their "volition," i.e. their motion, is caused by prior material factors outside of themselves. Pawns have no emotions or awareness at all...and certainly, no choices. But on this point the analogy isn't apt: that a pawn has an advantage of sorts over every Determinist. For at least in the case of a pawn, an
intelligent agent is manipulating it. That's got to be much better than simply being the pawn of material forces, which can have no purpose in what they impose on one. Material forces, if they control what you do, don't "care" about you, and don't have any "goal" or "purpose" in mind when they do. They just move you around without reason.
But you can of course exercise your will and move to the same show in the next room where the guy aborts his entrance into the house.
Not under Determinism, you can't. There is no "will," at least, none capable of being a causal factor in your behaviour.
Somehow I don't think you view yourself as the ineffectual guy sitting in a cinema epiphenomenally watching a fixed program. You claim you can initiate changes in the movie, yet you demonstrate (to the other characters in the movie) no such ability.
Why? Because I find your argument implausible? Funny idea, that. And ironic. I would say that hardly demonstrates an inability to think independently. Rather, it's far more likely that mindlessly
agreeing with what I was being told would indicate that.
However,
ad hominem...not legit, in this case. A straightforward fallacy. My attitude, even if wholly "programmed by my biases," might still be correct. You need to show the truth or falsehood of the statement, not your like or dislike of the person who offers it.
To a physical monist determinist, the will is completely free in that one is intimately part of causal physics and can do what one wants.
Incorrect. Again you seem to mix Determinism ("causal physics") and Voluntarism ("can do what one wants") without realizing you're being inconsistent there. According to strict Determinism, your will is also predetermined, and so doesn't authentically "cause" anything at all. You have no "wants" that are not mere products of the material forces. "You" don't "want" anything -- the material forces "want" it (so to speak) on your behalf.