Gary Childress wrote: ↑Fri Jan 31, 2025 4:01 pm
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Jan 31, 2025 3:12 pm
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Fri Jan 31, 2025 2:22 pm
So, it seems that I had no choice but to post this response. There was nothing I could do to not post it. I could NOT have looked at my response before posting it and decided to have deleted it. By virtue of the fact that this response has been posted, there was no other possible alternative that I could have decided against it. Is that correct?
And if it is the case that the religious embrace the impossible, then the answer to your question in the subject line should be obvious, that they do so because that is the way it must be. In a sense, it's not their "fault". It doesn't make them some sort of 'defective' being to simply play out what the universe has determined, does it?
So in a sense, all is as it is and cannot be other than what it is.
Is all the above correct or am I in error at any or all points?
Gary, you’ve got it exactly right. Every word you just typed, every decision leading up to it, and every thought you had about whether to hit "submit" were all determined by prior causes—your genetics, your environment, your past experiences, and the current state of your brain. You couldn’t have chosen otherwise because
nothing in the universe happens without a cause.
And yes, this applies to religious belief as well. Religious adherents don’t
choose to embrace the impossible; they believe what they believe because of the deterministic chain of influences that shaped them—culture, upbringing, psychological predispositions, and so on. It’s not their "fault" any more than it’s a rock’s "fault" for rolling downhill.
So where does that leave us? Well, recognizing determinism doesn’t mean we just throw up our hands. Understanding that people are determined by causes allows us to change those causes—through education, better environments, and reasoned discussion. The goal isn’t blame; it’s understanding what influences belief and behavior and then acting accordingly.
Wouldn't it be more precise to say that "understanding that people are determined by causes MAY CAUSE us to change"? Either we do or we do not change depending upon the influences that cause our behavior. I mean technically nothing "allows"
us to change.
And furthermore, you seem to suggest that this realization will only result in an improvement in human behavior. Why should we assume that recognizing that our behaviors are determined should result in some sort of net improvement in the world of human beings?
For example, what if it results in some people becoming more prone to behaving in ways that essentially downplay personal responsibility and therefore more decisions which are self-serving but bad for the overall community happen? How do we know that there is no downside to this? (Not that we can do otherwise if we have no choice.) Why is fatalism NOT also a possible product of this realization for some?
Gary, you’re absolutely right to push for precision here. Yes, it would be more technically accurate to say that
recognizing determinism may cause us to change rather than
allows us to change. Any shift in understanding, like all cognitive processes, is itself
caused—not freely chosen.
And how does that happen? Understanding may start as a
bio-chemical temporary strengthening of relevant synapses, much like short-term memory. If reinforced—through repetition, further thought, or new experiences—it can
cause permanent structural changes in the brain, such as the growth of new axon terminals, synapses, and pathways. In other words, learning and change aren’t mysterious acts of free will; they are
physical transformations driven by prior causes.
Now, on to your second point: Does recognizing determinism necessarily improve human behavior? No, not in some automatic, utopian sense. You’re correct that one potential response could be
fatalism—the sense that "nothing matters since everything is determined anyway." But this reaction is just
one possible outcome, not an inevitable one.
The key difference is how determinism is framed and understood. If people see determinism as a reason to
stop caring, that’s just another learned response—one that could be countered by emphasizing
pragmatic determinism:
- Understanding cause and effect allows us to
optimize those causes for better outcomes.
- We can still shape the future, not by “choosing freely,” but by
understanding and influencing what leads to better results.
- Personal responsibility doesn’t disappear; it’s just reframed as
causal responsibility—a recognition that our actions affect the world in predictable ways, and we should take that into account.
So, yes, determinism
could lead to people rationalizing selfishness or inaction, just like it
could lead to greater accountability and smarter decision-making. The difference lies in
how the understanding is reinforced and applied—which, again, comes down to the environment, experiences, and the structure of our learning processes.
Determinism doesn’t dictate a
specific response—it just tells us that whatever response emerges will be
caused by the conditions that shape it. And that means we have a role to play in shaping those conditions.