Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Dec 14, 2024 9:33 pm
BigMike wrote: ↑Sat Dec 14, 2024 8:51 pm
First, your claim that Libet’s experiments “show physiological symptoms of cognition” completely misses the point.
Actually, there's no other point that comes out of psychology. No sensible psychologist opts for Determinism, because it would leave them with NOTHING TO STUDY.

Psychology is the study of
cognition, not of
physics.
Second, your assertion that physics applies only to "physical systems" but not to "non-physical realities" is laughable.
And yet, you believe it. Because you keep trying to appeal to metaphysical properties. That's what argumentation does: it tries to appeal to reason, choice, decisions, changing minds, persuasion, truth, and all the other things Determinism makes irrelevant.
Your accusation that determinism invalidates reasoning or argument is a textbook strawman.
You're a taxicabber. You won't take your beliefs to the logical conclusion they demand of you. You jump out of the "cab," without paying the rational "fare," and run away before Determinism takes you to the place it inevitably goes.
But the empirical truth of that is easy to see on every side. How conveniently you ignore that science itself absolutely depends on our trust in things like cognition, choice, rationality, truth and will! As usual, you just pretend such arguments haven't been made.
Finally, your smug dismissal—“you clearly don’t believe what you’re arguing”—is a lazy ad hominem.
It's not
ad hom. It's manifestly true, by the very process of argumentation you're using right now. YOU are the evidence of its empirical truth. Like everybody else, you're simply unable to live with Determinism.
Determinism is incompatible with life. Nobody lives as a Determinist.
Your response is a tangled mess of willful misrepresentation and logical inconsistency, which I’ll address despite your apparent determination (pun intended) to ignore the actual arguments.
Your claim that “no sensible psychologist opts for Determinism” because it “would leave them with nothing to study” is both absurd and patently false. Psychology doesn’t require belief in free will to study cognition or behavior; it requires studying patterns, influences, and causes—which is exactly what psychologists do. Behavioral psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and fields like social psychology all investigate how external and internal factors
determine behavior, often explicitly challenging the notion of uncaused “choice.” Either you’re grossly uninformed or you’re deliberately pretending this body of work doesn’t exist.
Your assertion that determinism invalidates reasoning is tiresome and wrong. Reasoning is a process—a deterministic one—that arises from causes. Arguments and evidence influence thought because human cognition operates within the deterministic framework of cause and effect. The fact that you’re engaging in this discussion doesn’t invalidate determinism; it proves it. Your thoughts, like mine, are shaped by prior conditions, knowledge, and arguments presented. If determinism made reasoning impossible, you wouldn’t be able to hold your position any more than I could hold mine. Your argument is self-refuting.
Then there’s your strawman about science depending on “choice, rationality, and will.” Science depends on observation, evidence, and repeatability—all of which fit seamlessly into a deterministic framework. Your desperate attempt to insert “will” as a metaphysical necessity is baseless and unsupported. Rationality isn’t some magical, metaphysical process; it’s a function of the brain, governed by physical laws.
Your smug declaration that “nobody lives as a Determinist” is laughable. Every time we recognize that actions have causes—whether it’s addressing trauma to understand behavior, using data to inform decisions, or adjusting policies to achieve better outcomes—we
live as determinists. It’s only when people cling to the comforting myth of free will that they create incoherent systems of blame, punishment, and arbitrary moralizing that fail to solve real problems.
If you want to dismiss determinism, try engaging with the evidence instead of parroting tired, misinformed clichés. Until then, your objections amount to little more than an emotional refusal to confront uncomfortable truths. Determinism doesn’t need you to “live with it” to be true—it simply
is.