BigMike wrote: ↑Sat May 17, 2025 7:45 am
Darkneos wrote: ↑Sat May 17, 2025 12:45 am
BigMike wrote: ↑Fri May 16, 2025 10:38 pm
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.
Darkneos, you're grasping at straws and building scarecrows—so let's clear the field.
First, your most consistent move is to point to belief in free will as if it were
evidence of its truth. It's not. It's evidence of its popularity. People used to believe disease came from evil spirits too. Popularity is not proof. “It works” is not an argument for “It’s real.” And clinging to comforting falsehoods just because they’ve shaped culture? That’s not philosophy. That’s nostalgia with blinders on.
Now, on determinism: you keep accusing me of misunderstanding it, but what you call “determinism” is a cartoon. You collapse it into fatalism—"nothing matters, nothing can change." That’s not determinism. That’s resignation. And if you can’t tell the difference, maybe that’s why this conversation is going in circles.
Here’s how reality works, like it or not:
- You didn’t choose your genetics.
- You didn’t choose your early environment.
- You didn’t choose your traumas, your language, your neurochemistry.
- Yet, through all of that, you respond. And responses can be modeled. And those models can be influenced. That’s what we call social change. That’s what we call progress.
You sneer “you have no evidence”—but you haven’t cited a single study either. You gesture to “tons of research,” yet avoid actually engaging with any of it. But I’ll give you a name:
Eddy Nahmias, whose work on "bypassing" and the psychology of free will belief is more nuanced than your one-note alarmism. Or look at
Robert Sapolsky—who you know, and who directly connects deterministic understanding to
compassionate criminal justice reform.
You also wave away my reference to neuroscience-informed interventions, which already operate without presupposing free will. Restorative justice programs in Norway, Portugal’s drug treatment programs, trauma-responsive education—all based on behavior modification, not metaphysical autonomy. They’re real. And they work. You pretending they don’t doesn’t erase them.
As for your claim that “we lie to ourselves every day, so why not this one too?”—that’s a cynical surrender dressed up as pragmatism. Yes, we rely on mental shortcuts. But you’re advocating for propping up
a central moral and metaphysical illusion with no concern for its costs: mass incarceration, punishment-over-prevention systems, systemic blame, and indifference to root causes. That’s not a small lie. That’s a wrecking ball.
Now to your most frantic refrain: “Everything is the story!” No. Stories are
tools for communication. They are shaped by cause. They don’t override it. People act because they feel, and feelings come from biology, history, and conditions. The belief in freedom didn’t make people act. Their oppression did. Their cause was real. The belief was just how they interpreted it.
Lastly, this gem: “Under determinism people stop existing.” Really? You think being part of a causal universe erases identity? That’s like saying a snowflake doesn’t exist because you can trace its crystallization. People don’t disappear under determinism. The
myth of the ghost in the machine does. And what’s left is something real, and fragile, and improvable.
You’re mistaking comfort for truth, drama for depth, and stories for engines. Determinism doesn’t deny meaning—it asks us to build it honestly. It’s not bleak. It’s brave.
And if all you’ve got left is insults and denial, maybe the part of you that’s afraid this might actually be true is louder than you’d like to admit.
You, again, misunderstand. Belief in free will is what yields what you see around you, it makes people behave in arguably better ways. Especially when evidence shows to opposite hurts them.
If you're saying "it works" is not an argument for "it's real" then you're gonna have to throw away a HELL of a lot of stuff, including science itself.
Robert Sapolsky is a name I have already given as an example of someone who DOESN'T know how to build a society absent free will. Even in an interview he admits that all of society runs on the belief in free will and he had no plan for actually changing all of it.
I also don't know why you brought up Eddy Nahmias as his position is closer to what I am arguing than yours.
From his website:
“Why ‘Willusionism’ Leads to ‘Bad Results’,” which offers an explanation for why recent scientific claims that free will is an illusion may lead people to behave worse.
People like to pretend that without that belief in free will folks would do the same thing they always did, unaware that the belief in free will is why they do what they do and without that their motivation and drive would be very different (if it still exists).
The neuroscience interventions also operate under the assumption of free will. The assumption of it pervades our entire society and does affect the success rate of treatments.
The same goes for Portugal's Drug Use policy, it's also based on free will by offering the people who do it a choice instead of the Deterministic practices of other countries where they're treated as demons. The same for Norway.
No matter how desperate you try to assume that determinism is at play here the fact is the BELIEF in free will underpins every last one of these. If none of these people had that belief then none of these would be effective (and I'll have you reflect on why that is).
As for your claim that “we lie to ourselves every day, so why not this one too?”—that’s a cynical surrender dressed up as pragmatism. Yes, we rely on mental shortcuts. But you’re advocating for propping up a central moral and metaphysical illusion with no concern for its costs: mass incarceration, punishment-over-prevention systems, systemic blame, and indifference to root causes. That’s not a small lie. That’s a wrecking ball.
You're the one who doesn't understand it's costs, if you take the belief in free will away people literally stop trying to be better, we have studies on this. When you remove agency from people eventually they just give up. YOU haven't thought any of this through. None of what you've mentioned is the bad of free will, the same would happen under determinism. Punishment would still happen because it deters bad behavior, same with blame, and mass incarceration. Determinism doesn't change any of that, but belief in free will makes folks do something about that.
And it's not mental shortcuts, don't dress it up to avoid reality. The fact is we do lie to ourselves each day, and through that lie we make it come true. Like Death mentioned in Discworld "You need to believe in things that aren't true, how else can they become?". We don't know if we'll survive tomorrow, that's a lie we tell. But believing that makes us act in a way to help it happen. The same goes when someone says they love us, we believe it even though we can't read their minds.
Our very senses are shown to not portray reality:
https://www.sciencealert.com/to-help-us ... n-the-past
And yet we trust that what we see is accurate. Honestly it's just easier to call you stupid at this point.
Now to your most frantic refrain: “Everything is the story!” No. Stories are tools for communication. They are shaped by cause. They don’t override it. People act because they feel, and feelings come from biology, history, and conditions. The belief in freedom didn’t make people act. Their oppression did. Their cause was real. The belief was just how they interpreted it.
Stories are the cause, that's what it means to be social animals. The reason we do anything is because of the story that we tell. HISTORY itself is a story. Biology as we understand it is a story we tell to make sense of things, same with history, and "conditions". You act like these things are objective hard facts we know when they aren't.
Oppression and belief in freedom made people act, without belief in freedom there is nothing motivating people to break their chains.
You don't understand cause and effect, you still have the stupid view of it, or narrow.
Lastly, this gem: “Under determinism people stop existing.” Really? You think being part of a causal universe erases identity? That’s like saying a snowflake doesn’t exist because you can trace its crystallization. People don’t disappear under determinism. The myth of the ghost in the machine does. And what’s left is something real, and fragile, and improvable.
People do disappear under determinism, I explained why, maybe try reading other determinists to see:
https://www.snsociety.org/what-am-i-doing/
What's left isn't something real, fragile, or improvable. Stop using poetry for argument, it's not working for you. If there is no will, no soul, no independent ghost in the machine, then there is no person. It's just stuff happening, no one is there. Again, you want your cake and to eat it too.
You’re mistaking comfort for truth, drama for depth, and stories for engines. Determinism doesn’t deny meaning—it asks us to build it honestly. It’s not bleak. It’s brave.
And if all you’ve got left is insults and denial, maybe the part of you that’s afraid this might actually be true is louder than you’d like to admit.
No you're the one doing all that, by making determinism into what it's not. Determinism denies meaning by undermining all the usual metrics we have for it, namely agency and choice. You can't "build it honestly" because "you" have no choice, so you literally cannot. You are both appealing to determinism but acting like we have a choice. It's incoherent.
Flash was right, you have nothing substantial to offer and can't see the holes every post you make. You haven't read or studied the sources you cite nor do you see how belief in free will is imperative in them. You keep wanting determinism to be something it's not. Even under determinism it's better to leave the belief in free will than to take it, since robbing people of the belief in their agency and power is a net negative for humanity. Motivation would torpedo.
You also dismiss the power of storytelling in social animals, failing to see they are the engines behind the things that we do. We're at a point in society where we're past biology and evolutionary explanations. The cultural and social ones play a bigger role than either of those two, the fact you can't see that is naive.
Everyone here can see you're trying to have your cake and eat it too but the evidence doesn't support you.