attofishpi wrote: ↑Sun Dec 15, 2024 2:19 am
Hard-determinists are freaks as far as I am concerned!
Thank you!
Have you stumbled across the Boony's Room thought experiment upon the forum?
Not seen it by that name before, but the concept has been put forth many times.
Under Bohmian mechanics, with all physical state symmetrical including air particles, all hidden variables, and including the state of the entire visible universe external to the white room, the symmetry is never broken.
Under pretty much any other interpretation, deterministic or not, the symmetry is soon broken.
I don't assert any particular interpretation, but Bohmian mechanics is pretty low on my list, it being a last ditch attempt to salvage something like classical physics out of a non-classical theory.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sun Dec 15, 2024 4:33 am
These aren't determinists. They are libertarian free will people
I looked that up on wiki and it wasn't what I thought. First of all, they claim they have free will (how do they know?) and thus determinism is false. OK, that's valid enough, but then they say "requires the agent to be able to take more than one possible course of action under a given set of circumstances" which makes it sound like they can do both things instead of choose one. I mean, I say I have choice even under determinism, but I don't consider that choice to be free. So these guys try to do what the non-physicalists assert, but doing it under a non-deterministic version of physical naturalism. That seems easy enough. There are random uncaused events. If god is rolling dice, the eventual decision is not set in stone. If they consider that sort of randomness to be freedom, then so be it, but it's dice calling the shots then, not their own processes. Empirical evidence seems to not back this position up.
In other words, they deny first, often, that external causes determine their actions.
Try crossing the street without letting external causes influence your actions. This is one reason I think free will is a bad thing to have.
but the determinist believes that the combination of internal and external causes leads to choices and actions, and that this process is still inevitable, they deny that it is inevitable.
I agreed with it until the 'deny the inevitability' part. That seems to be the point of determinism: the entire sequence of events is defined by the initial state. People seem to find that distasteful and rationalize ways to avoid it, but I don't find it so.
They could have chosen to do B instead of A.
Hard to do that if you want A, but I've actually done that on occasion, choosing B despite wanting A. The Y2K Florida vote (Bush vs Gore) was a big example of that.
randomness does not lead to free will.
Many don't realize that, Libertarians apparently being top of the list, but I totally agree. There's no information in randomness, so basing choices on it does not make for good choices.
You've identified as a hard determinist.
Hard as in what one might consider to be 'the future' is set, existing as much as prior moments. It is not within my power to make any part of it other than what it is. My choice in quantum interpretations is still free to be any of them, including the ones with inherent randomness. But responsibility for actions is a classical subjective social concept, not something with meaning external to physics. Hence you can hold me responsible for following forum rules by reporting my offenses, but god, not being part of our physics, cannot hold me responsible for breaking forum rules. Free will would be required for the latter, and only the latter.