Darkneos—Darkneos wrote: ↑Sun May 18, 2025 1:42 amI mean this is a philosophy debate and you are arguing about what is better for society so in a sense you are arguing for utility. You're not arguing for truth.BigMike wrote: ↑Sat May 17, 2025 7:59 pm But let’s step back for a moment. You’re not defending truth. You’re defending utility. You’ve given up on whether free will is real, and instead staked your position on the idea that it’s a helpful lie—like Santa Claus for grownups. That’s your hill. And I need you to recognize that. You’re not arguing it exists. You’re arguing it’s useful.
And you know what? Sometimes illusions do feel useful. Placebos relieve pain. National myths hold countries together. But here’s the question you keep dodging: At what cost?
1. Belief in free will does not fuel cruelty.
2. Determinism destroys accountability because by definition no one chose to do what they did so they can't be blamed for it. Again accountability is incompatible with determinism, which is a point Sapolsky makes in his work (he even uses determinism to argue for no on deserving anything, that would include effort in things like sports or art). What you've described simply isn't true.
3. History and social structure is a story, it's the world of meaning we weave and inhabit. By determinism you cannot alter inputs, that implies agency that determinism says you don't have. Something either works or doesn't. That's not how change, parenting, or behavior science works. In fact if you knew anything about behavior science you'd know the story being told is important for animals like us. But again, under determinism people have no choice, meaning such interventions likely won't work if people don't believe in agency.
4. Stories are engines and maps. You keep talking about science and physics when all of that is maps too. All we have are maps, not reality itself. Revolution, pain, need, oppression, those are all stories being told by us. Read Buddhism to see how all that is a narrative built around a self, a self that does not exist under determinism.
5. I don't cite them out of context. I know he says free will doesn't exist (though his book and work don't necessarily prove that) but he acknowledges that society runs on that belief and so do our social interactions, entertainment, everything. That's why in the interview he said he didn't know how to implement a society without that. He assumes nothing would change when it clearly would.
My objection is to the science, because there is mixed results about free will. But more than that it's the social impact that's more important and one that I'd argue is the end point of science. Science is after all a human social endeavor to understand reality and we use that to guide us and society.
6. This:
Is literally false under determinism. You are still thinking with free will with "if we change what shapes it". You are telling people they are leaves on the wind subject to forces they don't control and at the mercy of things they don't understand. It's literally the death of motivation. No one is going to get out of bed in the morning if it feels like they aren't living their lives but just going through the motions. That nothing they do is in their hands and they have no choice about anything. Everything they love is because of outside forces, nothing about them. The people they cherish didn't chose them, it was just inevitable.Some might. At first. That’s why we reframe. Not with lies, but with new language. Instead of “you control everything,” we say, “Your choices are shaped by your past, but your future can still change—if we change what shapes it.” That’s still cause and effect. It’s still motivational. And it’s true.
Really think hard about number 6 because I feel like you don't get it. It's that naivete that just assumes it will work out when all the evidence we have shows that removing the feeling of choice or agency leads to depression and suicide.
There is no point to living life if you control none of it.
https://www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2021/ ... l%20health.
You have fantasies that don't match reality. Not to mention your examples aren't nearly comparable. Geocentrism was valid from the observations at the time and useful until new data up turned it, but it's not like it harmed people by doing it. Blood letting and divine kinds were also harmful. But free will, the belief in choice and agency has real consequences for peoples lives, and taking away that would ruin society (again...evidence). You aren't talking about growth, it's just ego stroking. Assuming you know best when you clearly have no idea the damage it would do or how to fix it.You ask why I “want to take belief in free will away.” I don’t want to take anything. I want us to grow out of it. Like we outgrew geocentrism. Or bloodletting. Or divine kings. And yes, that kind of growth is scary. But clinging to a comforting falsehood because it “keeps people in line” is not noble—it’s cowardice.
It doesn't "keep people in line" it's what drives everything we do. You have no plan for it's removal, just assurances nothing would change.
That's the thing, we don't. You don't get it, under determinism there is no reason for someone who doesn't give a damn to do so, because they have no choice or say in how they feel. You really don't get how pervasive the belief in choice and agency impacts human psychology and society. Under determinism there aren't people, just machines.If determinism is true, then people are not evil—they’re injured. They’re not broken—they’re caused. And the moment we stop pretending they “could have done otherwise,” we start building systems that don’t just punish, but actually prevent.
It's LITERALLY just physics playing out.
You're kidding yourself if you think you're talking about truth. Your thinking on this is so narrow that it's hard to argue because you can't see. The data is on my side, as we have shown when people are robbed of choice or agency they get depressed. All you have is "just so" statements not rooted in reality.And if you don’t like that idea—fine. But don’t pretend the data is on your side. And don’t confuse popularity with proof. Because truth doesn’t need applause. It just needs to be faced.
And that’s exactly what I’m doing.
Whether you admit it or not humans run on illusions, heck our own perception of the world is not reality. We already don't live in truth. You ignored the data I gave that supported that.
You're not serious about this, that much is clear, because your whole plan is just "trust me bro" followed by mere insistences.
Let’s break this down one more time, clearly and calmly, because you’re throwing a lot, and underneath it all is a single, fatal confusion:
You keep saying determinism means “there’s no point,” “no one does anything,” “no one gets out of bed,” “there’s no you.” But that’s not an argument. That’s just despair dressed up as analysis. And it’s based on a mistaken view of motivation—a view that assumes people act because of abstract beliefs about “agency.”
They don’t.
People act because their needs aren’t met.
Let’s get real: motivation doesn’t come from metaphysics. It comes from lack. From pressure. From tension. From unmet needs.
Every act of courage, every protest, every invention, every reform, every relationship, every “why” you’ve ever cared about—it was driven not by belief in magical freedom, but by some form of unsatisfied Maslow-level need. Safety. Belonging. Esteem. Survival. Purpose.
You don’t get up in the morning because you believe in libertarian free will. You get up because you’re hungry. Because someone needs you. Because you fear poverty. Or loneliness. Or failure. Or you’re chasing meaning, love, security, identity. And all of those are caused.
So let’s drop the fantasy that people need to think they’re metaphysically “free” to act. They need to feel that something matters—and that they can affect it. Determinism doesn’t rob them of that. It explains how it happens.
---
You keep saying:
“Under determinism there are no people. Just machines.”
Okay. First: you’re a machine. And so am I. But that doesn’t mean you don’t think, feel, cry, laugh, hurt, hope. Those things are real. They’re just caused. You want a ghost in the machine because the machine feels too cold. But the ghost was always imaginary. And the machine? It’s us. Beautiful, flawed, patterned, and improvable.
You say:
“There’s no reason to do anything if I’m not free.”
That’s just false. Determinism doesn’t say “nothing matters.” It says everything that happens—including what matters to you—comes from somewhere. Your hunger matters. Your loss matters. Your history matters. And that drives your action. Not the illusion that you’re a little god floating above cause.
---
And here’s the thing about your insistence that belief in free will “works”:
Even if it motivates some people in some studies—it also justifies cruelty. It’s why we say poor people “deserve” to suffer. It’s why we imprison drug addicts. It’s why we shame trauma victims. Because we pretend they “could’ve chosen differently.”
That’s your “helpful” illusion. That’s the cost.
And sure, you can say Sapolsky doesn’t have a full blueprint for a deterministic society. Fine. Who does? But it doesn’t mean the alternative is right. Nobody knew how to build a post-monarchy world at first either. That’s how progress works—it starts with truth, not comfort.
You keep shouting, “But people get depressed if they don’t feel agency!”
Yes. That’s exactly why we need to reframe agency, not fake it. We teach people: “You are not your trauma. You are not broken. Your actions come from somewhere, and if we change those inputs, things can get better.” That’s not disempowering. That’s compassionate design.
---
So let’s land this:
- Motivation comes from need, not freedom.
- Meaning comes from connection, not magic.
- Progress comes from truth, not myth.
- And determinism, properly understood, is not fatalism. It’s a path to real responsibility, real change, real healing.
That’s the work I’m doing. And that’s the future I’m fighting for.