compatibilism
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promethean75
- Posts: 7113
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Re: compatibilism
Depends man. First i gotta consider what kind of trouble i might get into if i started fuckin with em.
See how everything relevant here depends on what pleases me the most and has nothing to do with what anybody else thinks is right or wrong?
See how everything relevant here depends on what pleases me the most and has nothing to do with what anybody else thinks is right or wrong?
Re: compatibilism
IOW, you would use blame and guilt if it suited you.
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promethean75
- Posts: 7113
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Re: compatibilism
Here's the difference, P.
There is no freewill, so one can't be blamed or made gulity in the way of charging them with commiting a moral wrong when they could have chosen to do otherwise. That's impossible.
But one is blamed and made guilty in the sense of being the bodily cause of the action in question.
Joe's brain made him floor the gas peddle. He crashed. Joe is to blame (in part) for the damage done becuz joe was driving the car. He's part of the cause of the accident, just like a bolt of lightening is (in part) the cause of a fire, or Beyonce and JayZ are (in part) the cause of so much nausea in the world.
Now if u insist we can trace all the crap back to god, the first cause. Or, we can attribute individual effects (joe and beyonce and jayz) to an eternal chain of causes and effects. But in either case, joe and beyonce and jayz can't be blamed for being the origin of the things that they do. They are merely intermediate stages in a causal chain already in motion.
There is no freewill, so one can't be blamed or made gulity in the way of charging them with commiting a moral wrong when they could have chosen to do otherwise. That's impossible.
But one is blamed and made guilty in the sense of being the bodily cause of the action in question.
Joe's brain made him floor the gas peddle. He crashed. Joe is to blame (in part) for the damage done becuz joe was driving the car. He's part of the cause of the accident, just like a bolt of lightening is (in part) the cause of a fire, or Beyonce and JayZ are (in part) the cause of so much nausea in the world.
Now if u insist we can trace all the crap back to god, the first cause. Or, we can attribute individual effects (joe and beyonce and jayz) to an eternal chain of causes and effects. But in either case, joe and beyonce and jayz can't be blamed for being the origin of the things that they do. They are merely intermediate stages in a causal chain already in motion.
Re: compatibilism
One does a wrong and one is held responsible. One does a right and one is held responsible.promethean75 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 24, 2023 2:29 pm Here's the difference, P.
There is no freewill, so one can't be blamed or made gulity in the way of charging them with commiting a moral wrong when they could have chosen to do otherwise. That's impossible.
But one is blamed and made guilty in the sense of being the bodily cause of the action in question.
Joe's brain made him floor the gas peddle. He crashed. Joe is to blame (in part) for the damage done becuz joe was driving the car. He's part of the cause of the accident, just like a bolt of lightening is (in part) the cause of a fire, or Beyonce and JayZ are (in part) the cause of so much nausea in the world.
Now if u insist we can trace all the crap back to god, the first cause. Or, we can attribute individual effects (joe and beyonce and jayz) to an eternal chain of causes and effects. But in either case, joe and beyonce and jayz can't be blamed for being the origin of the things that they do. They are merely intermediate stages in a causal chain already in motion.
Seems to be clear to everyone except the philosophy types.
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Iwannaplato
- Posts: 8543
- Joined: Tue Aug 11, 2009 10:55 pm
Re: compatibilism
There's no point in using moral terms if you don't like the moral implications. You could say they were part of causal chains, period. But for some reason you want to call people guilty and responsible and blame them, categorizing it as blame.promethean75 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 24, 2023 2:29 pm Here's the difference, P.
There is no freewill, so one can't be blamed or made gulity in the way of charging them with commiting a moral wrong when they could have chosen to do otherwise. That's impossible.
But one is blamed and made guilty in the sense of being the bodily cause of the action in question.
Joe's brain made him floor the gas peddle. He crashed. Joe is to blame (in part) for the damage done becuz joe was driving the car. He's part of the cause of the accident, just like a bolt of lightening is (in part) the cause of a fire, or Beyonce and JayZ are (in part) the cause of so much nausea in the world.
Now if u insist we can trace all the crap back to god, the first cause. Or, we can attribute individual effects (joe and beyonce and jayz) to an eternal chain of causes and effects. But in either case, joe and beyonce and jayz can't be blamed for being the origin of the things that they do. They are merely intermediate stages in a causal chain already in motion.
- iambiguous
- Posts: 11317
- Joined: Mon Nov 22, 2010 10:23 pm
Re: compatibilism
Right.phyllo wrote: ↑Tue Oct 24, 2023 10:59 amThere appears little doubt you think that is the point, since you have written it hundreds of times and it seems to be your universal answer to all things regarding determinism.iambiguous wrote: ↑Mon Oct 23, 2023 7:52 pmAgain, that's not the point in a wholly determined universe.
In a wholly determined universe as some understand it, someone decapitates kittens because they were never able not to. Someone says what they do about that because they were never able not to. You and I react as we do to this because we were never able freely to react otherwise.
Point taken . Again.
But it's a small trivial point. Trivially true.
This...
...even if true is just a trivial point!In a wholly determined universe as some understand it, someone decapitates kittens because they were never able not to. Someone says what they do about that because they were never able not to. You and I react as we do to this because we were never able freely to react otherwise.
And all I can do -- click -- is to post what "here and now" seems most reasonable to me. So, given that 1] you actually do possess free will and 2] no one is sticking a gun to your head and demanding that your read what I post [or else] why don't you simply avoid me altogether here.
I'll tell you what...
Given autonomy from this point on we will both agree to avoid each other. Problem solved.
Deal?
And just for the record, if I was truly convinced that I do not possess free will, I wouldn't be here posting as though I do. On the other hand, some particularly hardcore determinists [compelled themselves] will just insist that this too is but another inherent manifestation of the only possible reality.
I just don't know. And, apparently, neither do any philosophers or scientists or theologians. Not really.
After all, if someone -- anyone -- had finally been able to demonstrate that we do in fact have free will wouldn't this astonishing news be everywhere? Wouldn't, say, NOVA have already aired a documentary confirming it?
On the other hand...
Here, however, is an article from Scientific American that suggests that, yes, we "sort of" may have free will: https://www.scientificamerican.com/arti ... u-are-too/
Again, I come back to this...
...because I do not deem it it be a 'trivial" thing.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.
Re: compatibilism
You responded to my post, Chuck.And all I can do -- click -- is to post what "here and now" seems most reasonable to me. So, given that 1] you actually do possess free will and 2] no one is sticking a gun to your head and demanding that your read what I post [or else] why don't you simply avoid me altogether here.
Why don't you take your own advice?
What the fuck would posting as if you know that you don't possess free-will look like?? Or posting as if you think you have free-will?? (Or any other variation for that matter.)And just for the record, if I was truly convinced that I do not possess free will, I wouldn't be here posting as though I do.
That's one of those bizarre things that's constantly repeated on this site ... "You're not posting or acting like a determinist"
As if a determinist acts in some way that is different from a free-willer.
Note to Iambiguous : I don't have libertarian free-will.
- iambiguous
- Posts: 11317
- Joined: Mon Nov 22, 2010 10:23 pm
Re: compatibilism
Absolutely shameless!!!Larry wrote: ↑Tue Oct 24, 2023 7:57 pmYou responded to my post, Chuck.And all I can do -- click -- is to post what "here and now" seems most reasonable to me. So, given that 1] you actually do possess free will and 2] no one is sticking a gun to your head and demanding that your read what I post [or else] why don't you simply avoid me altogether here.
Why don't you take your own advice?What the fuck would posting as if you know that you don't possess free-will look like?? Or posting as if you think you have free-will?? (Or any other variation for that matter.)And just for the record, if I was truly convinced that I do not possess free will, I wouldn't be here posting as though I do.
That's one of those bizarre things that's constantly repeated on this site ... "You're not posting or acting like a determinist"
As if a determinist acts in some way that is different from a free-willer.
Note to Iambiguous : I don't have libertarian free-will.
One of us, anyway.
Re: compatibilism
Now that he is out of the way, we can move on and make some progress. 
Re: compatibilism
If people have free will, why don't they just make all the annoying users on philosophy forums disappear, or see the light?
You have free will, all you have to do is want it and it happens.
You have free will, all you have to do is want it and it happens.
- iambiguous
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Re: compatibilism
Free will & Moral responsibility
AQA Ethics
Well, providing of course this is not just a trivial pursuit.
Now back to the part where I'm the first to admit I am just not intellectually sophisticated enough to fully grasp...
Well, providing, of course that this too is not just another trivial pursuit.
AQA Ethics
Again, how are we not stuck here? At least until scientists and/or philosophers and/or theologians reach a consensus regarding human autonomy. But then stuck further because how would we go about pinning down whether that consensus itself was arrived at autonomously?Harris asks you to consider the effect that learning about this brain tumour has on your sense of the Whitman’s moral responsibility. It seems to remove the sense that they were responsible. The murderer had no control over the brain tumour and thus it seems they had no control over their actions.
Well, providing of course this is not just a trivial pursuit.
Now back to the part where I'm the first to admit I am just not intellectually sophisticated enough to fully grasp...
Okay, but what if Sam Harris has no autonomous control over his suggestions?However, Harris then suggests that actually, in terms of moral responsibility, all human actions are like that.
Yes, that seems reasonable to me. But: does it include the "normal functioning" we pursue here in posting and in reading the posts of others? Or is it nature and the laws of matter all the way down?The violent actions were predetermined by the neurophysiology of the brain tumour, but if determinism is true, then all human actions are predetermined by neurophysiology. A brain tumour is an obvious striking case of interference in normal functioning, but if normal functioning is just as pre-determined as a brain tumour, then in terms of being a basis for moral responsibility, they are identical.
On the other hand, how is human logic itself not entangled in this conundrum? Is it not but one more inherent manifestation of the neurophysiology that may or may not encompass the entirety of human brain?If we are to be logically consistent, we should extend to all humans the same sense of a lack of moral responsibility that we have towards the violent man.
Well, providing, of course that this too is not just another trivial pursuit.
Re: compatibilism
He is going to get locked up.Harris asks you to consider the effect that learning about this brain tumour has on your sense of the Whitman’s moral responsibility. It seems to remove the sense that they were responsible. The murderer had no control over the brain tumour and thus it seems they had no control over their actions.
All humans will be locked up if they don't act "appropriately".However, Harris then suggests that actually, in terms of moral responsibility, all human actions are like that.
We treat them the same.If we are to be logically consistent, we should extend to all humans the same sense of a lack of moral responsibility that we have towards the violent man.
- iambiguous
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Re: compatibilism
Anyone else?phyllo wrote: ↑Tue Oct 24, 2023 8:35 pmHe is going to get locked up.Harris asks you to consider the effect that learning about this brain tumour has on your sense of the Whitman’s moral responsibility. It seems to remove the sense that they were responsible. The murderer had no control over the brain tumour and thus it seems they had no control over their actions.All humans will be locked up if they don't act "appropriately".However, Harris then suggests that actually, in terms of moral responsibility, all human actions are like that.We treat them the same.If we are to be logically consistent, we should extend to all humans the same sense of a lack of moral responsibility that we have towards the violent man.
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Iwannaplato
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Re: compatibilism
How could you make someone disappear or see the light if they have free will?
Re: compatibilism
Don't know, by being quicker than them?Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Oct 24, 2023 8:49 pmHow could you make someone disappear or see the light if they have free will?