Atla, I’m not denying that genetics plays a role in cognitive traits—of course it does. But invoking genetic determinism to justify racial hierarchies is not an honest application of determinism; it’s scientific reductionism weaponized to prop up preexisting bias.Atla wrote: ↑Thu May 22, 2025 6:30 pmYou're not a determinist then, your reply seems to be once again AI-generated, and AI is always politically correct. Determinists can absolutely arrive at the view that a group is mentally inferior compared to another group.BigMike wrote: ↑Thu May 22, 2025 6:18 pmAtla, that’s a fair challenge—so let’s unpack it honestly.Atla wrote: ↑Thu May 22, 2025 6:06 pm
Why not the other way around? For example a free-willer may expect everyone to have the same mental abilities, whereas a determinist may claim that in Africa the average IQ is 20+ point lower, so they are determined to be mentally inferior. It's getting old that he/it thinks that every problem in the world is caused by free will and the solution to all of them is determinism.
You’re absolutely right that determinism can be misused—just like any framework. If someone claims determinism proves certain groups are “mentally inferior,” they’re not applying determinism; they’re abusing it to smuggle in a hierarchy they’ve already decided on. That’s not a causal analysis—it’s biological essentialism, dressed up in scientific language.
But here’s the difference: true determinism, rooted in physics and systems thinking, doesn’t stop at surface-level traits like IQ scores. It demands we ask: why are there disparities in test results? What caused the environmental, nutritional, educational, and systemic conditions that shape those outcomes?
Determinism, when applied rigorously, doesn’t say “they’re born this way.” It says “nothing happens without a cause.” And that includes the long history of exploitation, colonialism, trauma, and inequality that shaped global disparities—including in Africa.
So no—I’m not saying determinism solves everything. I’m saying it forces us to stop blaming people for conditions they didn’t create. And that shift in perspective is key to building systems that are fairer, more humane, and more grounded in reality.
Free will thinking, by contrast, too often assumes: “they chose this.” And that’s how racism, classism, and cruelty get justified.
So it’s not that determinism is a magic solution. It’s that free will is often the hidden fuel behind moral judgment, blame, and systemic neglect. That’s worth calling out.
"True determinism" looks at all causes. Not just at environmental, nutritional, educational, and systemic conditions, you're acting like a free-willer. But also at genetical causes, yes according to determinism different groups can absolutely be born with different average IQs. This way determinism can "prove" certain aspects of racism.
Let’s clarify two things:
1. Genetics is part of the deterministic chain—but not the end of it.
Yes, determinism includes genetic factors. But deterministic thinking doesn’t stop at “Group X has lower average IQ.” It pushes us to ask:
- What shaped those gene pools?
- What selection pressures operated over millennia?
- How have nutrition, trauma, colonization, disease, and educational access influenced gene expression (epigenetics), brain development, and test performance?
2. IQ is not a fixed measure of “worth” or “intelligence.”
IQ tests measure performance on certain tasks—tasks shaped by Western education systems, language, logic traditions, and even test familiarity. Deterministically speaking, differences in outcomes reflect differences in input—not inherent value.
Even leading cognitive scientists like Robert Sapolsky, who defends hard determinism, warns against using IQ disparities as a moral or political cudgel.
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And let’s not ignore this:
Every time in history someone used “group IQ” to justify inequality, it wasn’t followed by neutral policy or scientific humility. It was followed by:
- Segregation
- Eugenics
- Sterilization
- Genocide
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You’re right: determinism doesn’t guarantee kindness or justice. But it removes the excuse of blame. And once blame is gone, we’re forced to build systems around support, opportunity, and truth—not condemnation and hierarchy.
If that’s politically correct, fine. It’s also scientifically sound, historically aware, and morally responsible.