I am familiar with the argument, just not moved by it. For one thing, I am tacitly accepting all the primary premises on the basis that they are the most likely, and I am not that interested in upending my universe for a tacit premise. But that said, I don't think the relationship between your premises and conclusions rises to the level of logical force that you think it does.BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 10:03 amFlash, I appreciate your effort to clarify your position, but let’s cut to the heart of the matter. If you accept the materialist/physicalist explanation—that every event, including thoughts, has a physical cause—can you see how this forces us to reconsider what moral responsibility even means?FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 1:11 amWell I feel like I already answered that one tbhBigMike wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 12:24 am
Flash, let’s clarify something fundamental: do you accept that every event, including thoughts, has a physical cause? That’s the cornerstone of any meaningful discussion about science, determinism, and the nature of reality. If you reject this, then say so plainly, so we can stop pretending this is a serious conversation. If you accept it, then it’s time to acknowledge the implications rather than sidestepping into personal jabs and deflections.
Your criticism of my tone is noted, but let’s not forget—smugness is no substitute for substance. So, what’s your answer?
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But if you want to know what I believe to be the case, that would be the materialist/physicalist explanation. We have no evidence of non-physical causation, but this is not the same as knowing that there is no such phenomenon. Nor does it prove that strict determinism cannot be upended by unpredictable physical events either. So I used the word believe deliberately because I am aware of the limitations of our knowledge.
Either way, there are no implications, certainly not moral or political ones anyway. Whether you choose to view the world as entirely caused, and fully explicable by reference only to the physical laws that direct the motion of atoms with no levels above that, it doesn't actually change how our conceptual picture of the world around us works unless it is wrong.
If you don't understand what I've written, please don't try to interpret that as me saying nothing. Perhaps it would help to think of other debates that seem really important to this one dude but which are completely unimportant in the grand scheme of things. There's a debate among scientists and philosophers about which things are real, or really-real, or really-really-really-real. Many hold that universe doesn't really exist, or that there's something there but we will never exactly know what. Some say that we are doing fine as long as we all sort of agree that we are talking about the same general thing. It's all really just a matter of how you describe the universe and what you think 'reality' needs to mean, but it isn't an actual important debate with real outcomes.
You can probably see what I mean when I say that about the realist debate, but I can point you at a guy who thinks all philosophy boils down to that one debate and nothing else and that guy really tries to use it to settle every argument. I say that you are doing a similar thing with this other unimportant debate.
For those outcomes to be so, there would surely need to be some way in which this deterministic world were actually different from the free-will world. There is not. We either make choices in the way that folk-psychology describes it, or we are perfect little robots that suffer a pointless delusion of choice while running their actual life on rails. Or some other descriptive paradigm applies such all of time happening all at once everywhere and there not even being a before or after for a framework of action to even exist in. Or some other thing .... the world as it is turns out exactly the same irrespective of which descriptive framework you choose.BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 10:03 am If every action is the inevitable outcome of prior physical causes, then what does it mean to hold someone morally responsible for their behavior? Punishment, blame, and even concepts like guilt hinge on the idea of free will—on the notion that someone could have acted differently in the same circumstances. If free will doesn’t exist, these concepts need rethinking. It’s not just an abstract philosophical exercise; it’s about how we approach ethics, justice, and accountability in a deterministic framework.
How exactly are we supposed to be going about making this choice about what to throw out and what not to? This looks like one of those scenarios where the author realises his logic places him on a precipice, but his lack of conviction doesn't allow him to jump.BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 10:03 am You’ve said determinism has "no implications," but is that really true? If every action is determined by physical processes beyond our control, doesn’t that demand a shift in how we think about personal responsibility? It doesn’t mean we throw out justice systems or moral reasoning altogether, but it does mean we need to align them with the reality of causation rather than outdated assumptions about autonomy.
The academic term evades me, but there are levels of description to these things, and the move you are making here uses a mode suitable to one level out of place. I am going to spice it up with another example. Consider mereology - the study of things that are made up other smaller things. Some people use it to say that there are no big complex things at all, but only small simple things packed into certain arrangements. It can answer some tricky questions about how to categorise some stuff.BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 10:03 am I’m curious if you see this connection or if you genuinely think it’s unnecessary to reconcile determinism with moral responsibility. Because if we can’t question the foundations of these ideas in light of physical causation, what’s the point of even acknowledging it? This isn’t a side issue—it’s central to how we understand human behavior and societal structures. Can you see why it matters?
But if somebody walks up to you and says that we should re-arrange our justice system because there are no persons, only arrangements of those objects we consider to be atoms of carbon oxygen and zinc and so on.... you might say this person has jumped the gun somewhat. If he says that carbon atoms are incapable of malice-aforethought and therefore it is unjust to contain them in prisons you wold find it difficult to say which was the most important problem with his argument I imagine? This will remain so even if the carbon was only obeying the laws of nature when it stabbed that man.