Dubious wrote: ↑Thu Nov 28, 2024 11:42 am
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Nov 28, 2024 8:46 am
So no, it’s not “business as usual”—at least not for those who internalize the implications. It’s the beginning of a long, deliberate shift toward a society that embraces truth, compassion, and rationality. What we build in its place is, ironically, up to us.
You're right in thinking that enough has been said about it. My view, to an extent, differs from yours in that I never underestimate human fallibility. If not expedient to the moment, humans will always short-circuit themselves in service to that moment. It's the most potent way to preempt the destiny he hopes to achieve.
For me the paradigm of free will relative to determinism is that they appear to be in collusion.
Determinism is a process, fixed by laws, by which determinations are made in the sense that it can negate any number of prior resolves that process may have encountered. Determinism is in that sense, recursive, a battle against itself; it is what critiques itself before finalizing the outcome...a drama which can happen in a matter of seconds without our noticing it, resembling, in effect, a free will episode which endorses the illusion that WE have decided.
...anyway, it was an interesting conversation, one in which I completely agree as to its physical underpinning but less so as to its consequences in terms of any kind of enlightenment the human psyche will accept.
Dubious, I appreciate your thoughtful reflection on this. You’re absolutely right that human fallibility is a formidable force, one that has often undermined our loftiest aspirations. The interplay between determinism and what feels like free will—what you so aptly describe as "collusion"—is at the heart of our struggle to reconcile the physical laws governing us with our subjective experiences.
Your point about determinism being recursive, critiquing itself through processes that resemble free will, captures the nuance perfectly. From this perspective, every decision—whether it feels free or not—is a negotiation within the web of prior causes, constraints, and influences. The illusion of choice is not trivial; it’s a necessary part of how our minds navigate an overwhelmingly complex universe.
As for the consequences, you raise an important caution. Even if we recognize the deterministic nature of existence, the human psyche, with all its biases and emotional needs, may resist internalizing these truths. Enlightenment, if it comes, will likely be slow and uneven. Still, I hold out hope that embracing this understanding could inspire a more compassionate and rational approach to the challenges we face—one step at a time, as the deterministic web allows.
It’s been a fascinating conversation, and I deeply value the perspective you’ve brought to it.