Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2020 2:56 pm
"Locked in " relates to the extent to which Henry may be able to change his mind according to reason and increased knowledge.
You've misunderstood what "Determinism" means, B. It does not allow for "minds" to be causal agents, and it doesn't allow for any "change" not obligated by prior causes.
Minds cannot
change, according to Determinism. What seems to us like "minds" and "change" are just the mindless playing out of previous forces. Minds are brains, and change is just the inevitable movement of forces in the direction they were predetermined to go anyway. Anything more is a delusion, according to Determinism.
Henry, and even Biblical literalists like yourself, might possibly become less certain and more open to new knowledge and new ideas in a manner that is not possible for bits of rock, viruses, and the more instinctive animals.
Determinism says this is not possible. There is no "might," because things always "become" only what they were going to "become" anyway.
If Henry were going to change his mind, he would be obligated by physical forces to do so, and so will do so. If he were not predetermined to do so by physical forces, he CANNOT. No "being open" is going to change that: "being open" is a delusion. The only thing a person is "open" to is being moved in the causally-dictated direction.
And there is no difference, in this regard, between Henry or me, and rocks, viruses and animals. What is "possible" for them is all that is "possible" for us. All are equally predetermined. Any other belief is just a weird delusion you were "caused" to have, because you also are simply in complete thrall to causal forces.
(P.S. -- The fact that you don't believe all this tells me you actually do believe in at least
some measure of free will. You just don't presently know you do, apparently. I'm just explaining to you what Determinism requires of you, if you really want to believe it.)