henry quirk wrote: ↑Fri May 16, 2025 8:11 pm
FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Fri May 16, 2025 6:51 pmYou...think...if free will is an illusion then the world would be different to the way it is
I never posted such a thing. My two nits -- I picked them over and over -- are these:
1-All of Mike's fine notions about justice, morality, social reform, education, compassion, meaning, value, what's good, what's evil, etc. aren't worth crap if this...
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri Nov 29, 2024 6:06 pmHere’s the brutal truth: your brain is a deterministic machine, operating under the same unyielding physical laws as a rock rolling downhill.
You don’t control your thoughts, your desires, or your decisions. You are driven by a cascade of external inputs, biological processes, and environmental stimuli—all of which you neither initiated nor directed.
...is true.
2-If free wills are taught they are
meat machines, atrocity will ensure.
As for free will as an illusion: it might well be (I've said so before). If so, I'll continue to go where the blind, amoral, deterministic forces direct. In context: I'll continue to blindly, amorally, advocate for man as a libertarian free will, self-directing, -reliant, and -responsible. And I'll continue to advocate for the Creator, the first free will. I mean, if I'm a
meat machine, then
that's kind of
meat machine I am, right?
Henry,
I hear your two “nits,” but let’s be clear: neither of them lands the blow you think they do.
First, you say my views on justice, morality, reform, compassion, and so on “aren’t worth crap”
if determinism is true. That’s your assumption—not a conclusion. You're working from an outdated framework that says: if we’re not magical soul-pilots with libertarian free will, then we can’t be moral beings, we can’t care, we can’t create value. But that’s a failure of imagination, not a failure of determinism.
You don’t need uncaused agency to be decent. You don’t need metaphysical independence to want a better world. You just need
causes that lead to compassion,
education that leads to growth,
systems that reduce suffering. If you reject all of that just because we’re not “uncaused choosers,” that says more about your attachment to an illusion than it does about the reality I’m describing.
Second, you say that if people are taught they’re meat machines, “atrocity will ensure.” That’s a fear—not a fact. It’s the Santa Claus defense: “If people stop believing in the story, they’ll misbehave.” But the truth doesn’t become less true because it’s uncomfortable. And if people only behave morally because they think they’re free agents under divine surveillance, then maybe it’s that worldview—
not determinism—that was always fragile and dangerous.
Here’s what you’re missing: understanding that we’re shaped by causes doesn’t diminish responsibility—it
redefines it. In a deterministic world, justice isn’t about blame, it’s about
causality and consequence. It’s about fixing the machine, not damning it. And if you still want to advocate for liberty, autonomy, and compassion? Great. Let’s just base those values on what people
are, not what we
wish they were.
You say you’ll keep advocating for a “Creator” and free will because that’s the kind of meat machine you are. Fine. But don’t confuse that with an argument. That’s not reason—it’s inertia. You’re doing it because it’s what you’ve always done. And if determinism is true, that tracks.
But don’t pretend your emotional discomfort is a refutation. It’s just the noise your mind makes when a cherished myth gets threatened by reality.