Atla wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 4:00 am
iambiguous wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2024 11:14 pm
On the other hand, the whole point some determinists seem compelled to make is that you too were compelled to assert that you are not a compatibilist. That anything and everything you "explain" to us here reflects just more dominoes toppling over.
I'd say, dominoes toppling over is a good way to think about this, but determinism doesn't really "compel" us to do anything. Those who say this may not really understand what determinism means.
Are you actually able to convince yourself that going back to whatever brought into existence the existence of existence itself...God? the Big Bang?...how you grasp what determinism and compatibilism mean together "here and now" is likely to be the most rational assessment?
In other words,
as an argument? Words defining and defending yet more words still?
The free will debate, in my view, has everything to do with thoughts and emotions and intuitions and psychological states. It's just that some determinists don't make a distinction between them. Why? Because nature itself doesn't make a distinction between them. Whereas -- click -- I'm still no less drawn and quartered here. Tugged ambivalent in completely opposite directions.
Atla wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 4:00 amDon't be tugged ambivalent in completely opposite directions, it's not normal and not healthy. Develop a set of core moral values.
Ah, a 'serious philosopher"?
You're not tugged ambivalently in regard to meaning, morality and metaphysics? And you have already developed a set of core moral values? And you no doubt embody all that is normal and healthy? So how on Earth, after noting this, can anyone here possibly still be confused about, well, any of this?
Here we go again. Since my reaction to your "two layers of philosophy" did not confirm your point about them, I clearly didn't read it.
Which is why -- click -- I often come back around to this:
Have you ever been wrong about something important to you pertaining to value judgments? or to the Big Questions?
If you say there were never any errors at all in your philosophical assessment of meaning, morality and metaphysics, sure, go ahead and actually believe that.
If you do own up to having made a mistake about something important in your life, however, you are admitting that you have been wrong about important things. Which of course is just another way of noting that you have been, are now and will be wrong about other important things too.
Atla wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 4:00 am Of course I've been wrong, everyone is wrong sometimes. How does this connect to what I wrote?
That's basically what I am trying to determine here:
are you a "meaning, morality and metaphysical" objectivist?
Do you believe that in regard to them, you have the capacity to articulate that crucial "deep down inside you" Intrinsic Self? A True Self able to discover or to invent an objective meaning, an objective morality, an objective metaphysics?
Other than in an argument aimed at "settling" it all...theoretically?
Yes, that works for some. But for me it just muddies the water all the more. All those things that are "arranged" by our brains given that...
"The human brain is made up of about 86 billion nerve cells, along with many other types of cells. They interact and link together in unique ways, creating distinct brain regions with specific functions." NIH
Think about it. Somewhere amidst those 86,000,000,000 cells there's this autonomous I still able to take charge when confronting conflicting goods? Sure, maybe. But when something is composed of 86,000,000,000 cells [not to mention 7,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 atoms] where to even begin to pin it all down.
In other words, empirically, experientially, experimentally and existentially.
Atla wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 4:00 amNo, when we look at it from the absolute determinist perspective, the autonomous I is an illusion. Like, half of Eastern philosophy is based on the illusory nature of the I, while Western philosophy is the philosophy of falling for the illusion.
But that's okay? Okay because as long as those like you are around able to sort these things out, uh, analytically, we can just stay up there until we finally "get it?".
Nothing is nonsensical [to me] if it was never able not to happen. It happens because it must happen. You and I and others react to it as we do because we were never able not to.
On the other hand, determined as defined -- as compelled to define? -- by those such that -- presto! -- somehow the determined outcomes in our lives are such that we must still to be held responsible for "creating" them?
Atla wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 4:00 amNot sure I get what you mean, looks like a moot point to me, you are conflating the two layers I mentioned above. Just let's drop such considerations in everyday life.
Not to worry. There's always the possibility that you were never able
to understand it in a wholly determined world. Just as there's always the possibility that how I think I understand it in a free will world is...ridiculous?
And I've lost count of how many philosophers I have come into contact with [virtually] who insist not only that conflicting moral and metaphysical quandaries/conundrums/antinomies can be reconciled or resolved, but that this must be true because they have already succeeded in conflating them "in their head" in order to embrace the One True Path.
Unless, of course, you are wrong. Unless, of course, you could never have not been.
Atla wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 4:00 amIf my take is demonstrably wrong then I'd like to hear why. I have a coherent universal philosophy that seems to work, and I'm not "fragmented".
But -- click -- that's the beauty of discussing and debating issues like this. In a No God world. All that is necessary is that, one way or another, you do believe it.
More to the point [mine] is the assumption [yours] that the human brain actually
can concoct an explanation for this such that all the dots mesh seamlessly into what you now believe in your head.
What I call the psychology of objectivism.