BigMike wrote: ↑Tue Dec 03, 2024 9:44 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Dec 03, 2024 6:29 pm
Lots of things disappear if Determinism is true: mind, consciousness, choice, morals, values, beliefs, identity, self, truth, science...lots of things. They all get reduced to the mere "epiphenomena" of the brain doing its physical-causal thing.
Let me address each of your points:
- Mind: Understanding the mind as a product of deterministic processes reframes mental health challenges as outcomes of specific causes—biological, psychological, or environmental—rather than personal failings or moral weaknesses. This perspective encourages a scientific, evidence-based approach to treatment, focusing on identifying and addressing these root causes. By removing stigma and blame, it creates space for compassion and targeted interventions, such as neurobiological therapies, cognitive behavioral strategies, or systemic changes to improve mental health outcomes. This shift not only benefits individuals but also promotes societal acceptance and support for mental health as an integral aspect of human well-being.
I've heard this kind of thing before. I'm sympathetic to your desire to create a better world, but beg you to consider the history of this kind of thinking, before you end up advocating repeating that history.
The problem with "reframing" a thing is that you must "reframe" it realistically, not ideologically, or you end up with abuses. Taking the sense of moral responsibility away from individuals does not improve their lot...it makes it immeasurably worse, because it recasts them as pawns of social engineering. If all that we are is attributable to our environmental conditions, then we have no power, no freedom, no options...whatever social conditions get issued to us by the elites, those determine our fate. And they are mere mortals -- albeit, usually unbelievably hubristic ones -- who then get to "social engineer" the masses for their ideological project, regardless of the cost. And it's all excused as "progress toward the good society."
If this were actually scientific, this would be a point in its favour. But it does not have any science in it...not even social science. If it did, it would take stock of the past of these sorts of projects. It has nothing but ideology, actually. And the historical record of such hopes is not just dismal...it's the most dismal record in human history.
Human beings do best when they take responsibility for their own choices, and answer for their own decisions. What you're suggesting deprives the ordinary man of responsibility and options, and empowers arrogant social-engineering elites to destroy them in the name of progress. This is a road we've seen often before...and it's a dark place to go...the darkest, in fact.
[*]Consciousness: Consciousness, when understood as an emergent property of physical systems, shifts the focus from mystical or supernatural interpretations to scientifically grounded inquiry. This perspective frames consciousness as a complex outcome of neural activity and interactions within the brain, governed by physical laws. By demystifying consciousness, we can approach its study with tools like neuroscience and cognitive science, exploring its mechanisms and origins in a measurable, testable way. This not only advances scientific understanding but also reduces the influence of supernatural explanations, encouraging a worldview rooted in evidence and logic rather than speculation or dogma. This shift promotes clarity and progress in addressing questions about the nature of human awareness and existence.
This all starts to sound like you're copying it from some kind of promotional material or propaganda. It's a little too tidy and paragraphed, and your own voice seems to have faded behind another...
Again, this is not what happens through Determinism. Determinism offers so little insight on these phenomena, actually, that it is forced to "reframe" them away from reality again, justs as with mind. It simply pretends they don't exist, because they don't fit the paradigm of physical causality. This truly does "demystify," but only by way of reduction and gross oversimplifcation of the data.
As for "evidence and logic," neither has any place in a Deterministic worldview, because "logic" is a cognitive function, a mind function, not a fizzing of synapses only. And "evidence" has to be perceived by a personal agent who recognizes it
as evidence, and for good reasons. But the personhood of the observer has been banished by Determinism. And again, the science is just not possible by way of Determinism. All that remains is ideological possession, excuses, total personal irresponsibility and capitulation to totalitarian, social-engineering-ambitious elites.
[*]Choice: When we recognize that choices are not made in a vacuum but are determined by prior causes—such as genetics, upbringing, environment, and external influences—it becomes clear that people’s actions are shaped by factors beyond their control.
This is absolutely deadly. It teaches the world to think of themselves not as empowered choosers but as helpless victims. It fosters spite and envy, too, as they come to imagine they are the victims of injustices foisted on them by the system or the successful. And they become bitter, nasty, cruel and inhumane...just as they did in the Soviet Union.
This understanding naturally fosters empathy, as it reframes harmful or misguided actions not as moral failings but as outcomes of a complex web of causation. Blame, often rooted in the belief that individuals could have acted differently in the same circumstances, loses its justification. Instead, society can shift toward restorative approaches, focusing on addressing the underlying causes of behavior, repairing harm, and preventing future issues. This perspective encourages personal growth and societal reform, emphasizing understanding and collaboration rather than retribution.
Just like it did in Soviety Russia? Or East Germany? Or Romania? Or China? Or Cambodia? Or North Korea? Or Cuba? Or Venezuela? Or...
[*]Morals: Under determinism, morality is no longer about enforcing blame or punishment based on the illusion of free choice; instead, it becomes a practical framework for enhancing well-being.
Determinism has no moral perspective at all. So far as it is concerned, morals are not real. They're not physical, after all.
What actually happens is the cap comes off evil. Since nothing is ever my fault, and I am a noble victim, I can kill my "oppressors," or anybody who contradicts "my revolution" with impunity. There being no moral authority in the universe anymore, there is literally no limit to what I can convince myself to do to others.
This, too, is a matter of historical record, not of imagination. We know what happens when this worldview is adopted: not all the sugary promises, but rather gross inhumanity and death. 140 million people, in the last century alone, conservatively speaking, died on the altar of this ideology.
[*]Values: Values rooted in determinism arise from a clear understanding that all actions and outcomes are interconnected through cause and effect.
There are no values: all values are contingent, arbitrary and constructed, according to this dogma. And the conclusion drawn from this is that we can "value" anything at all, or "devalue" anything at all, up to and including human suffering and life itself. And we will never answer for what we decide to "value," since there is no final judgment to call us to account; so anything the system allows us to "value," we can get away with.
[*]Beliefs: Beliefs, under a deterministic framework, are understood as the inevitable outcomes of prior causes—cultural influences, upbringing, experiences, and exposure to information.
Not quite. There's no longer a choosing, learning human agent for them to "inform" or "teach." Instead, we're all robots to be programmed by the elites. And what one "believes" -- nothing could be more irrelevant to a Deterministic ethos; for belief does not change things, allegedly: only action, praxis, work changes things. So who cares what people "believe"? It's only obedience that matters. (Ironically this is a perspective shared not just by secular Determinists, but by Islam as well, which cares more for submission than for belief. In both systems, what one DOES is put ahead of anything one believes...so long as that belief doesn't interfere with the program.)
I'm going to pause here. It's clear from the format and tone that what I'm arguing with is not you. It's a piece of propaganda you've copied. And one can tell it is: look at the way it valourizes Determinism, attributing to it every good and benefit, and not mentioning a single detriment, problem, insufficiency or liability. This is an account shaped to lead the reader into polyannish trust of some kind of Deterministic social program, rather than the personal meditations of somebody thinking the issues through. So I could waste a lot of time simply pointing out the holes and untruths in it, but I'd be talking to an absent person, whomever the writer of the propaganda piece is, not you. And he isn't listening. It's clear from his over-sunny account of Determinism, he's not thinking reflectively, critically or historically at all. He's just "selling snake oil," and isn't interested in anything that does not fit the promotional material of his cause.
But I'll talk to you, Mike...there's just no use in me continuing to talk to whomever this is. He's not listening.