Chomsky's lecture, fascinating and nuanced as it is, does not contradict determinism in any way. He delves into the limits of human cognition and the historical development of scientific understanding, but these topics align seamlessly with a deterministic framework. Here's why:Gary Childress wrote: ↑Mon Jan 06, 2025 2:01 amThis is the Chomsky lecture I was alluding to. I think you might find it very fascinating. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D5in5EdjhD0&t=24s
I'll be interested in hearing your response to it.
Chomsky acknowledges that humans, like all biological organisms, have cognitive constraints shaped by evolution. This directly supports the deterministic view that our mental faculties are the result of physical processes—biological evolution and neurological architecture.
His reference to Newton and the "limits of intelligibility" reflects the acknowledgment that human comprehension has boundaries. These boundaries are not a rejection of determinism but a recognition that our deterministic brains have evolved within specific parameters. Determinism doesn't promise omniscience; it describes how processes unfold within a causal framework.
Even the idea of "mysteries" that are beyond human understanding fits into determinism. Mysteries are simply phenomena that exceed the explanatory power of our current neural and intellectual capabilities, all of which are causally determined by our evolutionary history, culture, and education.
Chomsky’s mention of quantum mechanics and "spooky action at a distance" doesn’t challenge determinism either. Quantum phenomena operate under deterministic or probabilistic laws of physics, depending on interpretation, but they remain governed by well-defined principles. Quantum indeterminacy is not a loophole for free will or metaphysical entities—it’s simply a different kind of determinism, one that incorporates probability.
Chomsky's overall argument points to the humility required in scientific exploration, acknowledging that there are limits to what our deterministic cognitive apparatus can achieve. None of this undermines the deterministic view; rather, it complements it by situating human understanding within the scope of our evolved capacities.
If anything in the lecture seems to contradict determinism, it would have to rely on specific mechanisms or principles that show causation being violated. Chomsky does not provide such mechanisms; instead, he reinforces the idea that our knowledge and understanding, while vast, are inherently bounded by deterministic processes.