BigMike wrote: ↑Fri May 16, 2025 10:38 pm
Darkneos wrote: ↑Fri May 16, 2025 10:23 pm
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri May 16, 2025 10:07 pm
That last line—“the evidence is clear that belief in free will is beneficial for humans and society”—is doing
a lot of heavy lifting without checking the weight of its claim. So let’s check it.
Yes,
belief in free will can have psychological upsides. It can promote motivation, perseverance, personal responsibility—when it’s wrapped up in a sense of empowerment. But here’s the catch: it also promotes
blame,
vengeance,
punitive justice, and
moral condemnation. Belief in free will doesn’t just lift people up—it’s the same tool used to justify throwing people away.
You say people use determinism to excuse behavior? Sure. They misuse it—just like free will is used to justify everything from corporal punishment to genocide. The difference is that determinism, understood correctly, doesn’t eliminate responsibility—it
redefines it. If you’re caused to act violently, society should
stop the cause, not moralize your biology. That’s not “excusing.” That’s
engineering a solution.
You also say morality is based on what we
ought to do. True. But under determinism, “ought” doesn’t disappear—it just becomes conditional. If you want less suffering, less violence, more flourishing, then you
ought to intervene causally. You educate. You support. You prevent. No gods. No metaphysics. Just effecting change by understanding cause.
And as for saints and civil rights leaders—you’re right, many of them believed in free will. But that doesn’t mean free will caused their greatness. It just means they used the dominant language of their time. What
caused their actions? Empathy. Knowledge. Context. Experience. Causal factors every step of the way. Free will was the
story—not the engine.
So let’s stop pretending belief in free will is some harmless motivator. It’s the same belief used to justify cruelty, dismiss trauma, and prop up unequal systems. Determinism doesn’t remove meaning—it removes
delusion. And it replaces empty judgment with real solutions. That’s not a bug. That’s the feature.
Narrow view, as usual.
Blame, vengeance, punitive justice, moral condemnation, all that is also used to help. Society uses such things to keep people from acting out, though it's not always good. But I'd argue the upsides are better than the down, especially since the determinists I've heard don't have any plan for structuring society otherwise.
They don't misuse it, they do what it naturally does. Behavior is excused if you have no choice, it BY DEFINITION eliminates responsibility. what you're talking about doesn't work under determinism because society has no reason to punish someone who can't control themselves. That's like taking a tornado to court.
Ought does disappear under determinism because you can't do otherwise. Even this statement is nonsense:
If you want less suffering, less violence, more flourishing, then you ought to intervene causally
Why? Also they have no choice so there is no point in making such a statement. They don't control their wants, or anything else so what's the point in saying that? If anything they'd have ground to ignore you because they have no choice.
You know that psychologically humans are resistant to changing their minds and determinism just makes it easier not to, because "I can't control it".
But that doesn’t mean free will caused their greatness.
It did. It wasn't the emotions you mentioned (which by the way don't exist under determinism), it was the story. Belief in freedom and right to self determination gives people that power. The STORY IS THE ENGINE. You still don't get it. If they were determinists who didn't believe they had control over their lives it's unlikely they would have rallied to do anything.
So let’s stop pretending belief in free will is some harmless motivator. It’s the same belief used to justify cruelty, dismiss trauma, and prop up unequal systems. Determinism doesn’t remove meaning—it removes delusion. And it replaces empty judgment with real solutions. That’s not a bug. That’s the feature.
Nope, all the research based on human wellbeing and mental health shows the exact opposite so you're in the wrong here. Humans literally feel and do better when they believe they have control over their own lives and can determine their destiny. Literally no evidence supports taking away that belief would be better.
You are arguing for a version of determinism that is NOT reality. Determinism has no real solutions, and you've proven that because you haven't given any, you just INSIST otherwise. And the argument fails like your last one when I pointed out the evidence that shows your view robs people of meaning.
I can't even call what you argue determinism, just delusion. The delusion that things would be better off despite the mountains of evidence to the contrary.
You're confusing emotional comfort with truth—and you're clinging to a comforting myth because the truth doesn’t stroke your ego.
Yes, belief in free will
feels good. So does believing you’re the hero of your story. But that doesn’t make it true. Santa Claus makes children feel secure and joyful. That doesn’t make him real.
You say determinism “eliminates responsibility.” No—it eliminates
blame, which is not the same thing. Blame is about retribution. Responsibility is about response. Determinism shifts the goal from “punishing evil” to
understanding causality and
preventing harm. And yes, that works. That’s why we treat mental illness and trauma-informed care as
interventions, not moral failings.
You say “ought” disappears under determinism. It doesn’t. It becomes
instrumental. If you want X, and Y leads to X, then you ought to do Y. That’s how science, medicine, education, and engineering work. “Ought” isn’t about divine command. It’s about cause and effect.
Now, about that “story.” You’re saying the myth of free will
caused the civil rights movement. That’s absurd. It wasn’t a story that created courage. It was history. Oppression. Community. Injustice. Solidarity. All causes. All real. People didn’t act because they were “free.” They acted because
something made them act. Belief in freedom was
part of the causal chain, not the unmoved mover.
And your go-to argument—“the research says”—fails if you don’t cite it. I’ve read the same studies. Some suggest that a
belief in agency helps motivation. Sure. But that doesn’t mean we need to lie to ourselves to function. It means we need to update our models. We can design systems that support dignity and motivation
without the metaphysical baggage of free will. It’s been done. Look at neuroscience-informed rehabilitation programs. Look at education based on executive function and developmental psychology. Look at behavior science. Those are deterministic. And they work.
You’re so committed to the myth that you can’t see how much harm it does. Every time someone says, “They chose to be poor,” or “He deserves to rot in prison,” or “She brought it on herself”—that’s your precious free will at work.
So no, I don’t accept your emotional appeal as evidence. You’re defending fantasy because reality makes you uncomfortable. But discomfort is where growth begins. And if determinism is uncomfortable, good. That means it’s touching a nerve worth examining.
You're the one clinging to fantasy here, I don't know how else to explain that what you advocate isn't determinism.
Reread everything I've written before replying because I'm tried of the repeating myself to someone who doesn't understand their own philosophy.
Now, about that “story.” You’re saying the myth of free will caused the civil rights movement. That’s absurd. It wasn’t a story that created courage. It was history. Oppression. Community. Injustice. Solidarity. All causes. All real. People didn’t act because they were “free.” They acted because something made them act. Belief in freedom was part of the causal chain, not the unmoved mover.
ALL OF THAT IS THE STORY YOU IDIOT!!! God...
Do better than mere insistence...entertaining you fantasy of what you believe determinism to be is getting old.
You’re so committed to the myth that you can’t see how much harm it does. Every time someone says, “They chose to be poor,” or “He deserves to rot in prison,” or “She brought it on herself”—that’s your precious free will at work.
It's not, and the fact you think so just shows how narrow your view is, which explains your writing.
And your go-to argument—“the research says”—fails if you don’t cite it. I’ve read the same studies. Some suggest that a belief in agency helps motivation. Sure. But that doesn’t mean we need to lie to ourselves to function. It means we need to update our models. We can design systems that support dignity and motivation without the metaphysical baggage of free will. It’s been done. Look at neuroscience-informed rehabilitation programs. Look at education based on executive function and developmental psychology. Look at behavior science. Those are deterministic. And they work.
We lie to ourselves every day to function, that is also part of determinism. We believe we'll survive the month despite no evidence showing it, that food is safe, etc. Every day we operate on useful illusions, that's human life, an also compatible with "Determinism". We lie to ourselves every day to function, neuroscience proves that much as well. Our experience of the world is a "lie" in that our brains model reality to help us navigate it and use predictions to cover the rest.
Dignity and motivation are also part of belief in free will. When you believe you have a choice and can change it makes it likely you'll do so, studies show that. Too many choices can paralyze you but having none leads to depression.
Look at neuroscience-informed rehabilitation programs. Look at education based on executive function and developmental psychology. Look at behavior science. Those are deterministic. And they work.
Vague gesturing with no studies, you have nothing. That also doesn't address that everything in culture and society depends on belief in free will, even what we value and our entertainment. Can you imagine how different sports competitions would be under determinism? Neither team would feel like "They" won because it was due to outcomes beyond their control and not person effort or will.
There is no education based on executive function or developmental psychology. Behavior science has also largely been hit and miss with ability to predict humans. They don't work and they are far from deterministic. Same with neuroscience-informed rehab.
Again you think too small, you aren't seeing what motivates people and how society works, even you still believe in free will as well (it's the only way your philosophy works). In fact I'd argue the rest of that works because of the belief in free will. Again, you grossly underestimate how much in impacts EVERYTHING in science and society. That's why some people with actual degrees still don't have a plan for what to do to remove that belief.
Why? Because they all realize how much society depends on that belief (which still factors into determinism mind you).
You haven't read anything otherwise I wouldn't have to repeat myself each time. All I can say is that you have given this zero thought because you have no plan, no idea what it would do to society, just mere insistence it'll "work out" (which by the way is the source of many disasters).
Determinism isn't about dispelling illusions, that's the stupid view. It recognizes some illusions are beneficial and useful due to the effects they have, like free will, and that removing them would cause harm (again we have TONS of psychological data showing that loss of agency or feeling of control over ones life has negative mental health consequences and leads to suicide).
How do you think human social interactions will also go when people learn there was no choice in who was going to be with them or not? Bleak, considering how much free will (or belief in it) is factored into our interactions with people.
You also don't see how people stop existing under determinism, it's just physics playing out. There is no independently existing agent making choices or decisions, it's all elementary particles.
You severely underestimate how deep the belief of free will is tied into society and what it affects (that includes emotions).
To put it bluntly, you're just wrong on this.