Drugs should be decriminalised everywhere. It's a non crime and a non issue and has nothing to do with whatever your 'argument' is.BigMike wrote: ↑Fri May 23, 2025 9:37 pmAlexis, if you think the Norwegian Vikings were peace-loving models of impulse control, ask the Brits. Or the French. Or anyone who lived through Lindisfarne, Paris, or the thousand other raids. The Norwegians weren’t exactly known for rehabilitation in the 9th century. They were known for burning monasteries and enslaving entire villages. So if you’re under the impression that Norway's low recidivism today is just the echo of some ancient cultural restraint, you’ve skipped about 1,000 years of history and reform.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Fri May 23, 2025 8:36 pmAnyone, everyone can act differently in any given moment. That is more true than saying no one in a given moment could act differently.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Fri May 23, 2025 7:46 pm Determinism means no one could have acted differently in the moment. That’s not a philosophical garnish—it’s the core. No freedom to choose means no moral justification for blame-based punishment. Period. You can’t logically hold someone “accountable” in the traditional sense if their actions were the inevitable result of prior causes.
But it is certainly true that men can be trained to control their impulses and to think about consequences in the moment.
That people who engage in crimes make the choice to do something illegal and punishable is a complicated issue. But it is plainly false to say “they had no choice”.
The question of how criminals should be effectively punished is separate from the pseudo-philosophical assertion that no one can choose, in a given moment, what they do. It stands to reason that it is more efficient and less expensive in the long run to attempt rehabilitation of a criminal rather than to be punish with vengeance tactics.
But the apparent fact that Norway, with one of the lowest crime rates in the world, even before they reformed the prison system, has low recidivism rates does not prove Mike’s assertion that men cannot choose their behaviors.
And if you think the Lindisfarne raid is fantasy, I’d say your skepticism is misfiring. But forget Vikings for a second. Let’s talk Portugal.
They decriminalized drugs over two decades ago. Treated addiction as a medical issue, not a moral failing. Their rates of drug-related deaths, HIV infection, and incarceration all dropped dramatically. Not because people suddenly “chose better,” but because the conditions that drive behavior were intelligently reshaped.
That’s determinism in action: you change the outcomes by changing the inputs. You don’t scream at the addict to "make better choices." You change the environment that produces addiction. Just like Norway changed the environment that fuels recidivism.
Your insistence that “anyone can act differently in a given moment” is not an argument—it’s a faith statement. It feels true because you’re used to thinking that way. But feelings aren’t logic, and intuition isn’t evidence. The deterministic view doesn’t deny that people change—it explains how and why they change, without resorting to metaphysical free will.
So if you want to argue against determinism, you’ll need more than vague appeals to what “stands to reason.” You’ll need to explain how anything—any thought, decision, or action—escapes cause and effect. Until then, all you’re doing is declaring your belief louder, not defending it better.
You are getting really annoying. By saying that 'accepting determinisim' means we can then 'choose to be kinder and more just' is a contradiction. You don't appear to have the brain capacity to see that. Don't bother replying. If I wanted an 'answer' I could just refer back to any one of your tediously repetitive (but typo-free) AI word salad posts.