BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Jan 20, 2025 7:10 pm
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Alexiev, you’ve moved from irrelevant deflection to outright nonsense with this latest diatribe. Let’s get one thing clear: dismissing determinism as irrelevant while smuggling in arguments about its supposed failures only exposes your incoherence. You claim to have never rejected determinism, but your entire argument hinges on the idea that it’s either meaningless or harmful. So, which is it? Are you rejecting it outright or just terrified of its implications?
Let’s dismantle your drivel:
- Your "irrelevance" claim: Determinism is not irrelevant because it forms the backbone of every scientific advancement humanity has achieved. Medicine, technology, engineering, climate science—every single one of these fields depends on deterministic principles. The fact that you can write your dismissive nonsense on a computer is itself proof of determinism’s relevance. Or do you think the electrons in your keyboard are engaging in "free will"?
Hard determinism clearly does not form the backbone of science. That's nonsense. Instead, scientists try to observe what happens and speculate as to what general rule can predict similar occurences. Science makes no claims whatsoever about the universality of these rules or the possibility of miracles that defy the rules. Why would it? Such claims are beyond the realm of science.
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b]Your appeal to political failures:[/b] Communism and eugenics? Really? Neither of these failed due to determinism. They failed because of flawed ideologies, human corruption, and bad implementation—not because they relied on an understanding of causality. Conflating political atrocities with deterministic science is an insult to reason and history. Show me where the four fundamental interactions of nature caused a Stalinist purge. Oh, wait—you can’t, because this is just another one of your desperate attempts to distract from your lack of a coherent argument.
They represent two of the most significant attempts to use a scientific approach to order society. This is obvious. Two terrible examples do not prove that scientific approaches can never work, but they suggest a degree of caution of which fanatics like you seem incapable.
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b]Your astrology strawman:[/b] Equating determinism with astrology is laughable. Determinism doesn’t claim "everything causes everything else." It asserts that every event has a cause that operates within the constraints of physical laws. Astrology, by contrast, is pure pseudoscience—something your argument increasingly resembles.
Really? Then why are you arguing? Everyone agrees that events tend to "operate within the constraints of physical laws" (some people believe in miracles, which may also be constrained by laws of which we are unaware). You're the one who stated that all events have been "determined" forever. If so, astrology would be reasonable in principle, even if (like scientists) astrologers often are wrong.
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So, let me ask you again: if determinism is irrelevant, as you claim, what mechanism governs human behavior and the universe at large? And don’t dodge with more rhetoric about political failures or the humanities—give me a mechanism that doesn’t violate conservation laws or the four fundamental interactions. If you can’t, then admit that your argument is little more than a frightened refusal to engage with reality.
Your question reveals your utter failure to understand my critique. I've used the card analogy many times. The order of the cards (everyone agrees) is predetermined by the shuffle. But the fact that it is predetermined is irrelevant to the gambler, who can only make decisions based on the fact that the order is random
to him. The same is true for us in the rest of life. In those areas where the future is unknown (we all know that if we drop something it will fall) we act as if the future is indeterminate. This is so obvious that you display an unconscionsble degree of either stupidity, ignorance, or prejudice by failing to acknowledge it.