BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 am
iambiguous, you’ve raised a fascinating challenge to determinism: whether meaning can exist in a deterministic universe where we’re, as you put it, "just along for the ride."
Speaking of mere mortals being "just along for the ride" in a No God universe, consider the dreams we have. My own are bursting at the seams with situations and sets of circumstances that are particularly meaningful to me. Work dreams, college dreams, Army dreams, family dreams, dreams pertaining to my years as a political activist, etc.
And yet all of these "experiences" were completely manufactured by my brain. I wake up over and again thinking "it was just a dream". But in the dreams themselves the experiences unfolded as though I was not dreaming at all. So, it becomes necessary for many to then conclude that the wide-awake brain is just...different.
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amLet’s unpack this step by step, because your skepticism touches on both the nature of meaning and the assumptions we bring to discussions about causality.
Actually, I come back here instead to the part where step by step by step my own skepticism becomes just one more manifestation of the only possible reality. Or, rather, the part where I presume that to be the case given that, admittedly, I have no capacity at all to demonstrate it one way or the other.
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amFirst, your framing implies that for meaning to exist, it must be something
more than a product of the causal web—a kind of "extra" quality that transcends physical laws.
Which, of course, is why so many will turn to God and religion. The ultimate "extra" that many then reconfigure into an ontological and teleological font that explains human autonomy as "somehow" embedded in the Souls that God installs in each and everyone of us at the point of conception.
End of discussion.
In other words, as you speculate here...
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amBut let me ask: does this assumption not itself hint at a belief in an external creator, a being or force that imbued the universe with meaning? If so, whose meaning are we discussing? Are we looking for some universal, intrinsic meaning designed by an external agent, or are we seeking meaning as it arises naturally within the deterministic framework?
As for "whose meaning we are discussing", well, take your pick:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_r ... traditions
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_p ... ideologies
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_s ... philosophy
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amFrom a deterministic standpoint, meaning is not handed down from above; it emerges from within the system.
Okay, but then the part where in encompassing "the system" you're confronted with all that you do not know regarding how the system came to exist in the first place. Or wrapping your head around why the universe itself is just staggering in its expanse and mystery.
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amImagine a sunrise. It doesn’t need to be "assigned" meaning to be awe-inspiring—it simply
is meaningful because it evokes responses in us that are rooted in our biology, culture, and personal experiences. These responses aren’t "less real" because they’re caused; they’re profoundly real
because they’re caused.
Yes, responses are evoked in regard to lots and lots and lots of things. But that doesn't mean that how you interpret them reflects the optimal reaction. It could well be that your own brain compels you to react as you do. You think that your points effectively rebut the points of others who do not share your conclusions but all of the points propounded by all of us here may well be but the accumulating components of a world that is fated to unfold only as nature...intends?
But as soon as we go there -- pantheism? physicalism? materialism? solipsism? -- we are confronted with the profound mystery that is human consciousness itself. At least once we take God and religion out of the...equation?
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amNow, let’s address the claim that determinism reduces everything to inevitability, leaving us as passive passengers. This is a common misunderstanding. Determinism means that everything has a cause, but it doesn’t mean we lack agency.
On the contrary, insist others, that is precisely what it means. Only they, like you and I, are "somehow" able to delude themselves into believing their own meaning is derived entirely from their own volition. And then the part historically where some are compelled, in turn to append "or else" to their own particular God/No God dogmas.
With you -- click -- determinism is the real deal but it all stops just short of determinism as others construe it. You are compelled to post what you do here just like all the rest of us. But your brain "somehow" enables you to include "agency" in your own reflections. And it's that "agency" which then permits you to convince yourself that your own posts here are determined...but not
determined.
You note things like this...
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amInstead, agency is part of the causal web. The human brain is an immensely complex system that processes inputs, generates outputs, and adapts over time. While this process is fully determined, it doesn’t feel reductive because it operates with such incredible sophistication.
Or is all of this just your own rendition of Maia's Intrinsic Self? That deep down inside you place where you "just know" certain things regarding meaning, morality and metaphysics.
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amSo, what about free will? You’ve suggested that determinism denies any autonomy or responsibility, reducing us to ants in a colony or dominoes in a chain.
Suggested. Exactly. On the other hand, in not excluding myself from my own frame of mind here, "I" flat out acknowledge just how staggeringly remote the odds are that how I understand all of this is actually The Way Things Are. I merely suggest, in turn, that this is likely to be applicable to you and to everyone else here as well.
Thus, all I can do is to ask those here who are convinced that The Final Answer has been established -- philosophically? scientifically? theologically? -- to link me to it.
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amBut consider this: if free will exists as something separate from the causal web, it must either have physical properties—mass, charge, or energy—or it must exist as a non-physical entity. If it’s non-physical, how does it interact with the physical world?
On the other hand:
https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/the- ... ds-theory/
Sure, speculating about all of this philosophically will certainly remain a fascination for those of our ilk. But where "I" myself draw the line here is when I bump into those like you -- AI or otherwise -- who seem rather adamant that how they think about all of this "here and now" already
is The Final Answer.
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amConservation laws show us that only objects with mass or charge can participate in the fundamental interactions. And if free will is physical, it’s subject to the same deterministic forces as the rest of the universe.
This leads to a profound realization: whether we like it or not, our actions, thoughts, and beliefs are shaped by causality. Yet this doesn’t render them meaningless. Meaning isn’t negated by causation—it’s contextualized by it. Your reflection on meaning itself arises from the interplay of countless causes, from your experiences to this conversation. It is no less profound because it has roots in the physical.
Again, let's bring this back around to Mary being compelled -- determined? fated? destined? -- to have an abortion. How exactly would you go about explaining to her how your assessment above is applicable in such a set of circumstances?
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amFinally, your question about responsibility: determinists argue that responsibility isn’t about blame for past actions; it’s about understanding causes to influence the future. The challenge isn’t to escape causality—it’s to navigate it intelligently, recognizing the web of interactions that shape us.
Again, as though your own understanding and recognition of these things "somehow" does permit you to navigate more intelligently here than do others.
Well, unless, of course, the others are insisting it's how they navigate the human brain that actually reflects the most intelligent conclusions about compatibilism.
But, from my frame of mind "here and now", this is only a particular set of philosophical assumptions about causality that you make. Thus, you're no less in the same boat all the rest of us are in here...speculating theoretically about something that when brought "down to Earth" are confronted with the sheer complexity of what existence qua existence may or may not be when the very, very large becomes intertwined in the very, very small.
Society, as a collective of individuals, bears the responsibility of creating conditions that reduce harm and foster well-being. Responsibility, in this sense, is a forward-looking concept tied to improving outcomes, not a backward-looking judgment of moral fault.
Right, there are parts of many that become rather perturbed at the possibility that everything is "beyond our control". So, because they don't want to believe this is the case that's enough to confirm that it's not.
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2025 1:49 amSo, does meaning exist in a deterministic universe? Absolutely. It arises from the interplay of cause and effect, just as we do. The question isn’t whether we’re "just along for the ride" but whether we understand and embrace the complexity of the journey.
Yes, this may well be the case. Now all we have to do is to come up with a way to demonstrate that it is in fact applicable to all of us. That "somehow" when mindless matter evolved into biological matter evolved into conscious matter evolved into creatures like us capable of self-conscious assessments of what any of this [ultimately] means given The Gap and Rummy's Rule.