On the contrary, the truly hardcore determinists insist, there is absolutely nothing that we think, feel, say and do that is not wholly subsumed in a wholly determined universe.
What, assessing culpability is the one exception?
Sculptor wrote: ↑Thu Sep 01, 2022 9:37 pm That is neither true nor relevant.
Again, the distinction I always make here is between those who will assert things like this as though in asserting them that makes them true, and those who will actually attempt to back up such assertions with substantive experiential and experimental evidence.
Like the "hard guys" do.
Going back to, say, everything that there is to know about the "human condition" given everything there is to know about existence itself?
Sculptor wrote: ↑Thu Sep 01, 2022 9:37 pm If a person is determined to do wrong then he is culpable. And as change is always possible with determinism, then the penal system can make that change for the better.
Okay, back to Mary. What are you saying here...that if Mary is wholly compelled by the laws of matter embodied in her brain to abort Jane, she is still culpable -- "meriting condemnation or blame especially as wrong or harmful" -- for doing so? Or, as some might argue, are you holding her culpable because you are wholly compelled by the laws of matter embodied in your brain
to hold her culpable.
Sculptor wrote: ↑Thu Sep 01, 2022 9:37 pm Deterrence to the degree it can determine new outcomes is more effective than imagining that people can act freely regardless of consequence.
Again, speculation of this sort is no less subsumed in this:
All of this going back to how the matter we call the human brain was "somehow" able to acquire autonomy when non-living matter "somehow" became living matter "somehow" became conscious matter "somehow" became self-conscious matter.
Then those here who actually believe that what they believe about all of this reflects, what, the ontological truth about the human condition itself?
Then those who are compelled in turn to insist on a teleological component as well. Usually in the form of one or another God.
Meanwhile, philosophers and scientists and theologians have been grappling with this profound mystery now for thousands of years.
Either in the only possible reality in the only possible world or of their own volition.
Thus from their point of view this...
Sculptor wrote: When a person determinedly breaks a law with the full knowledge of breaking the law, he is judged for the person he is not the choice he has made, since he was determined to make that choice he is to be punished for being the sort of person who commits crimes.
This is why we have "correctional" facilities, so that the hardships of imprisonment or the advice of rehabilitating advice might change the nature of the person and so cause a beneficial change.
If determinism is not true then change is not possible and we ought to throw away the key or kill prisoners if they have free will to chose to commit as many crimes as the will.
...too is but one more inherent manifestation of the only possible reality in the only possible world.
Or, sure, in regard to prisoners and our reaction to them, that too is an exception to the immutable laws of matter rule. One of the dominoes that get away.
As though when someone breaks the law in a determined universe their knowledge of what they do is, as well, "somehow" beyond the reach of material laws.
Sculptor wrote: ↑Thu Sep 01, 2022 9:37 pm How the hell do you get there.
You are not getting it.
Note to others:
When those like Sculptor tell you you are not getting something it almost always means that you still refuse to get it as they do. Only in regard to questions like determinism/free will/compatibilism philosophers, scientists and theologians have been squabbling now for literally thousands of years regarding what it means
to get it.
Still, all the "thrashing about" that we do here could be entirely avoided if we simply recognized that the objectivists among us are never wrong about, well, anything.