attofishpi wrote: ↑Sun Nov 24, 2024 8:56 am
BigMike wrote: ↑Sun Nov 24, 2024 8:47 am
attofishpi wrote: ↑Sun Nov 24, 2024 8:08 am
Mike!!
You appear to be ignoring ol' atto where I feel I have kicked "hard" determinism in the bollocks..
--> earlier you stated from the Boony's Room thought experiment that the two identical instances of David Boon would diverge in their actions after some time..to which I agreed.
BigMike:
"If they were truly identical—right down to the atomic level and beyond—then yes, their behavior would align perfectly. At least for a time, until random quantum effects begin to accumulate, eventually influencing their divergence."
So, there you admit that where minds are concerned hard determinism falls apart. That actually, you'd have to admit in that my question above is extremely unlikely to occur again within an identical Big Bang scenario. Since where the conscious mind decision making process occurs, quantum indeterminacy has such a profound affect as to refute any argument hard determinism attempts to make.
Given ALL the same conditions of the Big Bang, this planet Earth is extremely likely to exist.
However, since human conscious minds exist, this planet would never look identical again if the identical Big Bang were repeated.
Y ? ..because conscious human minds with their decision making "will" are affected by quantum indeterminacy within their decision making process...hence humanity will never look the same again!
What is it? You can't have divergence of David Boon and David Boon and still insist that this current conversation was always destined to be since the Big Bang!
Atto, you're grasping at straws. Determinism says everything is caused, and those causes are exchanges of conserved physical properties like energy, momentum, and charge—all governed by the conservation laws. These laws are foundational to every field of science, and so far, not a single one has been found flawed. If you accept the conservation laws, then you must reject free will, because no mysterious "will" can interact with the brain without violating these principles.
Quantum indeterminacy doesn’t save free will. Randomness isn’t agency; it’s just unpredictability within a deterministic framework. If you think quantum effects grant free will, you need to show how they bypass conservation laws while magically creating intentional decisions. If you can’t, then your argument falls apart. Either name the conservation law you think is flawed or admit that free will has no place in a causally consistent universe. Science stands with determinism, not your wishful thinking.
But hang on here Mike, I am not making an argument for free will, I am making an argument against "hard" determinism.
1. On the one hand, you insist that since the Big Bang me typing this to you would be instantiated precisely the same way IF the same Big Bang and all conditions were perfectly the same existed again - that in EVERY instance of the Big Bang with all the precise same conditions...that this here conversation would exist.
2. On the other hand, you state RE the Boony's Room thought experiment, that the two identical instances of David Boon would diverge in their thoughts/actions through time due to "random quantum effects"..
...surely U see how you can't stick to point 1. AND point 2. - you've got to pick a side Mike, you can't have both options, so which is it?
Atto, your argument misinterprets quantum uncertainty and its implications for determinism. Quantum uncertainty, as described by Heisenberg's principle, states that we cannot simultaneously
know the exact position and momentum of subatomic particles with absolute precision. This does not mean that those particles
lack specific positions and momenta—only that our ability to measure them is limited. The uncertainty is epistemic (about what we can know), not necessarily ontological (about what exists).
Now, addressing your points:
1. If the Big Bang and all its conditions were perfectly identical, the universe would unfold exactly the same way. Even quantum uncertainty would originate from the same initial conditions. The "randomness" we observe arises from our inability to measure or predict certain outcomes, not because they are causeless. Quantum mechanics operates within a deterministic framework at the level of fundamental laws.
2. The divergence you refer to in the Boony’s Room thought experiment would occur only if quantum states are allowed to vary. In a
truly identical scenario, with every particle and quantum state precisely recreated, even quantum randomness would follow the same probabilistic rules as before, leading to identical outcomes. Divergence happens only when quantum states differ across iterations, which does not apply in a perfectly identical scenario.
You’re conflating unpredictability (our limited ability to calculate outcomes) with indeterminism (events lacking causes). If you want to argue against hard determinism, you need to show that quantum effects introduce genuine causeless events and that those events somehow override the brain’s physical processes to create "will." So far, quantum mechanics provides no evidence for causeless events overriding determinism in any meaningful way. Conservation laws remain valid, and determinism stands unshaken.