Dubious wrote: ↑Thu Dec 05, 2024 6:40 am
...much of philosophy is nothing more than a huge landfill of bunk.
Then why are you here?
...but the point, I repeat, is that whether determinist or free will exponent, nothing changes for either party.
It seems to change for Mike. He says it makes him want to be a Socialist. Now, that may be totally irrational of him, and I don't doubt that it is; but it's certainly a "change" of sorts.
In this connection, Mike is willing to give us all over to the elite social-engineers, who will then determine for the masses what they are allowed to have, to know, or to do. And he thinks -- or claims to think -- this would conduce to a better society, rather than the dystopian nightmares to which it's always led historically. So he's arguing, essentially, for a change in governance and a change in personal freedoms, as well.
And this appeals to the lazy and irresponsible, of course. If big government will "take care of me," then I have no more obligations to work, to serve others, or to contribute at all to society. I will be nanny-stated from womb to tomb, goes the belief...free provision of everything -- food, clothing, jobs, health care, welfare, basic possessions, etc., and no more anxiety about how I'm using my talents and opportunities, since all are simply dictated for me.
Then there's a bonus for science, too...though there's a terrible loss on the backlash. The loss, of course, is the coherence of science itself; but if I give that up, then, as an agent of science or of social science, I get a bonus: in principle, science can do anything it wants in the project of manipulating, engineering or even transforming human beings, and there is no larger meaning to human life that I, as a scientist, must respect. Human beings have no essence, no integrity, no inherent dignity -- no more than a rock, a tree or a bug -- and they become a standing reserve for whatever I decide I want to do with them. So science loses its rational basis, yes; but if I ignore that, and just carry on as if it makes no difference, then science gets total liberty to do anything it can conceive to do.
Also, I can kill as many as I want. As Marxists have long reminded us, History is "a wasteful process." In its "advance," many people die. So what? They're bugs. Anyway, it's not us that's killing them, according to the myth: it's History (capital "H") that does that. Millions may die for the cause of "progress": but so what?
But there are other things that"change," too: one of the big ones is anthropology. If human beings, and all their apparent choices, are purely products some force out there in the universe, then they're mere robots. They cannot do otherwise than they do. This, then, affects other things: how much can we either praise or blame somebody for being a good person or a bad person, when he/she had no choice whatsoever about being what they were?
And this brings us to a third, and the one that, I think, most appeals to Determinists: the end of moral responsibility. If I can't help what I am or what I do, I cannot be responsible, either. I'm not a "bad" person if I mistreat you...I have no other choice. And you're not a better person than me for being what you are, then...you don't deserve credit for your morality. We all get to be amoral. Well, with the bad side that everybody else also gets to be amoral to us.
No one pre-calculates their decisions based on whether they're predicated on free will or through the control of fixed laws.
Mike seems to have. He says he has. Do you disbelieve him?