durkadurka, you only believe in free will because....(LC)
06-01-2010
, 05:30 PM
Quote:
As for the rest, it's a lot of gibberish. If you accept that determinism is true, it makes much of your "philosophizing" pointless. Your desire to live in your illusion was forced on you. That you want to make a "broader class of concepts" and hold "provisional positions" is all the result of things that you can't control.
Quote:
Indeed, one of the main reasons to reject determinism is that it doesn't correspond to the experience of life. I don't care how nice of a toy model universe it is, if it isn't accurately reflecting the universe, then it's of little value to me.
Last edited by lagdonk; 06-01-2010 at 05:39 PM.
06-01-2010
, 05:39 PM
I'm not sure what you think your argument is.
Try restarting. State the argument to which you're responding. Then, offer your response.
I think that you may not understand that to which you're responding. I read and re-read your post and it makes no sense wrt the dialectic ITT.
Try restarting. State the argument to which you're responding. Then, offer your response.
I think that you may not understand that to which you're responding. I read and re-read your post and it makes no sense wrt the dialectic ITT.
06-01-2010
, 05:41 PM
Carpal \'Tunnel
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 30,132
How can I persuade you of anything? You've asserted a particular hypothesis: "Determinism is true." Then you go on to essentially deny that hypothesis by trying to make some affirmative claims about your ability to make "decisions" as if that has a meaningful interpretation UNDER YOUR HYPOTHESIS.
The ability to string a lot of words together does not mean you've actually made an argument for anything.
I think it's actually a very powerful philosophical argument. What would philosophy be without daily human experience? If we had no "daily human experience" what would we "philosophize" about?
Your call to the "scientific" is a red herring.
The ability to string a lot of words together does not mean you've actually made an argument for anything.
Quote:
I have met this objection before in the thread, and will repeat my reply. Daily human experience and our intuitive sense of the world are not in themselves a philosophical or scientific counter-argument.
Your call to the "scientific" is a red herring.
06-01-2010
, 06:08 PM
Quote:
How can I persuade you of anything? You've asserted a particular hypothesis: "Determinism is true." Then you go on to essentially deny that hypothesis by trying to make some affirmative claims about your ability to make "decisions" as if that has a meaningful interpretation UNDER YOUR HYPOTHESIS.
Having processed, thought through, and evaluated the robustness and soundness of these positions, I (and others) then began to wonder about what happens to traditional, freedom-oriented concepts like responsibility, punishment, human effectuality, and so on.
My own direction at that point has been to suggest that we evidently experience what I'm stipulating (in light of determinism) is a powerful illusion of willfulness, agency, relative freedom, and effectiveness in everyday life.
The details of all of the above, including the latter-most part, are laid out in prior posts, obviously. What your grand objection to all of this is, I cannot tell, because you continue to speak in blunt and blanket dismissals, rather than point-by-point.
Quote:
The ability to string a lot of words together does not mean you've actually made an argument for anything.
Quote:
I think it's actually a very powerful philosophical argument. What would philosophy be without daily human experience? If we had no "daily human experience" what would we "philosophize" about?
Your call to the "scientific" is a red herring.
Your call to the "scientific" is a red herring.
06-01-2010
, 06:09 PM
Quote:
I'm not sure what you think your argument is.
Try restarting. State the argument to which you're responding. Then, offer your response.
I think that you may not understand that to which you're responding. I read and re-read your post and it makes no sense wrt the dialectic ITT.
Try restarting. State the argument to which you're responding. Then, offer your response.
I think that you may not understand that to which you're responding. I read and re-read your post and it makes no sense wrt the dialectic ITT.
06-01-2010
, 06:11 PM
Suppose this 'meaninglessness' is granted. Why do we care? What are the implications of this 'meaninglessness'?
06-01-2010
, 06:11 PM
Seriously...you're putting WAY too much weight into Strawson...that was like 50yrs ago and no one buys his argument(s).
06-01-2010
, 06:12 PM
The idea being that there's a persistent intuition that there IS meaning...hence, a sort of reductio. But, of course, this is entirely consistent w/ determinism being true hence the charge of underdetermination.
06-01-2010
, 06:14 PM
Quote:
Over the course of this thread, between madnak, myself, smrk, and others, a philosophical argument that compellingly lays out a determinist (modulo QM) understanding of the universe has been put forth, with attendant challenges to the traditional and/or libertarian conception of free will. A complimentary challenge to free will has also come from Strawson's account (linked by smrk) of the no-freedom pessimistic argument.
Having processed, thought through, and evaluated the robustness and soundness of these positions, I (and others) then began to wonder about what happens to traditional, freedom-oriented concepts like responsibility, punishment, human effectuality, and so on.
My own direction at that point has been to suggest that we evidently experience what I'm stipulating (in light of determinism) is a powerful illusion of willfulness, agency, relative freedom, and effectiveness in everyday life.
The details of all of the above, including the latter-most part, are laid out in prior posts, obviously. What your grand objection to all of this is, I cannot tell, because you continue to speak in blunt and blanket dismissals, rather than point-by-point.
Can you really not imagine yourself on the other side of a comment like this when deciding to make it? It's essentially a terse and total rejection of the meaningfulness of anything I've said. Here I am in previous posts citing or paraphrasing specific statements you've made and thereby trying to engage with your remarks directly, and in return I find you summarily disqualifying entire posts of mine as mere strings of words that amount to nothing.
Do you not see you error here? Please attend carefully. You say you think that daily experience is a "very powerful argument." Then you ask what philosophy would be without it, and what we would philosophize about without it. In your very own account, you are equivocating about daily experience. You begin by calling it "an argument." Then you shift to saying that it is what we "philosophize about." Which is precisely my point. Daily experience by itself is not an argument; it can be the matter or subject of an argument; as you say, what we philosophize about.
Having processed, thought through, and evaluated the robustness and soundness of these positions, I (and others) then began to wonder about what happens to traditional, freedom-oriented concepts like responsibility, punishment, human effectuality, and so on.
My own direction at that point has been to suggest that we evidently experience what I'm stipulating (in light of determinism) is a powerful illusion of willfulness, agency, relative freedom, and effectiveness in everyday life.
The details of all of the above, including the latter-most part, are laid out in prior posts, obviously. What your grand objection to all of this is, I cannot tell, because you continue to speak in blunt and blanket dismissals, rather than point-by-point.
Can you really not imagine yourself on the other side of a comment like this when deciding to make it? It's essentially a terse and total rejection of the meaningfulness of anything I've said. Here I am in previous posts citing or paraphrasing specific statements you've made and thereby trying to engage with your remarks directly, and in return I find you summarily disqualifying entire posts of mine as mere strings of words that amount to nothing.
Do you not see you error here? Please attend carefully. You say you think that daily experience is a "very powerful argument." Then you ask what philosophy would be without it, and what we would philosophize about without it. In your very own account, you are equivocating about daily experience. You begin by calling it "an argument." Then you shift to saying that it is what we "philosophize about." Which is precisely my point. Daily experience by itself is not an argument; it can be the matter or subject of an argument; as you say, what we philosophize about.
The concepts of responsibility, choice, etc. are gone...all that would be left is a persistent illusion.
06-01-2010
, 06:24 PM
... right. I (think I) see. Don't see why it matters, but whatever.
06-01-2010
, 06:26 PM
Quote:
If determinism is true, whether you were going to punish someone or not was already determined as well. If you punish someone, it's not as if you could *NOT* have punished him, and if you did not punish him, it's not as if you *COULD* have punished him. Pragmatism has nothing to do with it.
The question is meaningless because the script has already been written and everyone is just going through the motions.
The question is meaningless because the script has already been written and everyone is just going through the motions.
06-01-2010
, 06:37 PM
Pooh-Bah
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 3,928
You could point him the direction of critiques... Oh wait, that was the point, right? Dude, google "criticism of strawson" is what Durka meant to say.
Last edited by BrianTheMick; 06-01-2010 at 06:38 PM.
Reason: 50/50 he comes back with, it was not like 50 yrs ago
06-01-2010
, 06:54 PM
Carpal \'Tunnel
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 30,132
Quote:
Over the course of this thread, between madnak, myself, smrk, and others, a philosophical argument that compellingly lays out a determinist (modulo QM) understanding of the universe has been put forth, with attendant challenges to the traditional and/or libertarian conception of free will. A complimentary challenge to free will has also come from Strawson's account (linked by smrk) of the no-freedom pessimistic argument.
Quote:
Having processed, thought through, and evaluated the robustness and soundness of these positions, I (and others) then began to wonder about what happens to traditional, freedom-oriented concepts like responsibility, punishment, human effectuality, and so on.
My own direction at that point has been to suggest that we evidently experience what I'm stipulating (in light of determinism) is a powerful illusion of willfulness, agency, relative freedom, and effectiveness in everyday life.
The details of all of the above, including the latter-most part, are laid out in prior posts, obviously. What your grand objection to all of this is, I cannot tell, because you continue to speak in blunt and blanket dismissals, rather than point-by-point.
My own direction at that point has been to suggest that we evidently experience what I'm stipulating (in light of determinism) is a powerful illusion of willfulness, agency, relative freedom, and effectiveness in everyday life.
The details of all of the above, including the latter-most part, are laid out in prior posts, obviously. What your grand objection to all of this is, I cannot tell, because you continue to speak in blunt and blanket dismissals, rather than point-by-point.
I don't go point by point because it's not relevant. That you want to chase a bunch of tangential arguments is not going to distract me.
Quote:
Can you really not imagine yourself on the other side of a comment like this when deciding to make it? It's essentially a terse and total rejection of the meaningfulness of anything I've said.
Quote:
Here I am in previous posts citing or paraphrasing specific statements you've made and thereby trying to engage with your remarks directly, and in return I find you summarily disqualifying entire posts of mine as mere strings of words that amount to nothing.
Quote:
Do you not see you error here? Please attend carefully. You say you think that daily experience is a "very powerful argument." Then you ask what philosophy would be without it, and what we would philosophize about without it. In your very own account, you are equivocating about daily experience. You begin by calling it "an argument." Then you shift to saying that it is what we "philosophize about." Which is precisely my point. Daily experience by itself is not an argument; it can be the matter or subject of an argument; as you say, what we philosophize about.
If I did not have daily experiences of making decisions, I wouldn't have any reason to believe I had free will. And if I did not have daily experiences of making decisions, we would not be able to talk about the daily experiences of making decisions.
06-01-2010
, 06:59 PM
Quote:
My conversation with Aaron began over this claim he made:
My replies have been about re-characterizing the status of scriptedness and the meaningfulness and viability of certain concepts in a manner distinct from his take on the issue, establishing my sense of the clash between philosophical determinism and daily experience, which leads me to speak of a powerful illusion, and him to incline towards dismissing determinism because it does not comport with his daily experience, and some other stuff in there that you gentlemen have exhausted me too much to spell out right now.
My replies have been about re-characterizing the status of scriptedness and the meaningfulness and viability of certain concepts in a manner distinct from his take on the issue, establishing my sense of the clash between philosophical determinism and daily experience, which leads me to speak of a powerful illusion, and him to incline towards dismissing determinism because it does not comport with his daily experience, and some other stuff in there that you gentlemen have exhausted me too much to spell out right now.
I actually still think that you're arguing against a straw man. I don't think that he's dismissing determinism. He's working with what I've been saying that IFFFFFFF determinism is true, then x is a meaningless question. That's not him rejecting determinism.
06-01-2010
, 07:00 PM
lag...I think that you're missing a lot of the 'if' statements in Aaron's posts...that IF you accept determinism, then x follows...you seem to be mistaking him for saying that 'x is meaningless' without noticing the 'if determinism is true' part.
06-01-2010
, 07:19 PM
Also, not that it matters particularly, but you said in your previous post that you don't think he's dismissing determinism. But I have noted a few moments in his replies where he has said things like 'your toy model of the universe [i.e. determinism] has no value for me' and 'it does not reflect the universe.'
In any case, that's not really central to the conversation as far as I can see, which is about what accepting determinism entails.
06-01-2010
, 07:22 PM
Carpal \'Tunnel
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 30,132
It's just something that's fundamental to how I understand what I'm doing in this crazy universe that I somehow find myself in. So I'm going with it.
06-01-2010
, 07:38 PM
Quote:
That's because the points you are making don't have anything to do with the position I'm taking. I'm repeatedly trying to tell you that determinism as a position has specific consequences. And no matter how much you are drawn into the illusion... it's still an illusion. It's not real "decision-making." It's not a real "punishment." It's just going through the motions that are being dictated to you. No volume of words about your illusion, no matter how robust of an illusion you manage to create, can change this. Indeed, the sense of the illusion itself was already prescribed.
Anyway, I'm beginning to suspect that our back-and-forth, after communicative difficulties have been eroded, will turn out to revolve around a difference in how we respectively characterize and think about the nature and status of the powerful illusion I've stipulated exists under determinism. If so, I'm not sure how much further value there is down that avenue.
Last edited by lagdonk; 06-01-2010 at 07:46 PM.
06-01-2010
, 07:49 PM
Carpal \'Tunnel
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 30,132
Quote:
You're just wanting to point out their unreality and non-actuality.
Quote:
And in turn, I want to point out that your concerns about the illusion kind of melt away. It almost becomes a semantical quibble for you to mention that I don't actually have the control I illusory believe I do. For I cannot help experiencing feelings of control, no matter what philosophy reasons is the ultimate, material state of things.
Quote:
I get what you're saying, but feel you've completely misplaced the emphasis. If the illusion is deep enough, to what extent should it still be considered an illusion?
Quote:
Well, philosophical determinism classes it as such. Fine. But as I've tried to suggest in earlier replies, if the illusion is powerful enough, it does not matter very much outside of discussions about determinism that it is forced upon us and our lives are dictated below it. If the illusion is robust enough, then is it not a kind of secondary or simulated reality in which we can enjoy (or are forced to experience, to speak philosophically) sensations of relative freedom, human effectuality, and so on?
Quote:
Anyway, I'm beginning to suspect that our back-and-forth, after communicative difficulties have been eroded, will turn out to revolve around a minor difference in how we respectively characterize and think about the nature and status of the powerful illusion I've stipulated exists under determinism. If so, I'm not sure how much further value there is down that avenue.
06-01-2010
, 07:58 PM
You think it's "gibberish" to conceive of a universe in which causally determined and complex structures (call them human beings) are made to have an experience of reality in which they experience themselves as self-directed, effectual, and relatively free -- even while ultimately, in a manner they cannot sense, their progression is scripted and they're simply along for the ride? Where is the incoherence in such a scheme, from a logical and semantic point of view, leaving aside its truthfulness?
06-01-2010
, 08:09 PM
Carpal \'Tunnel
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 30,132
Quote:
You think it's "gibberish" to conceive of a universe in which causally determined and complex structures (call them human beings) are made to have an experience of reality in which they experience themselves as self-directed, effectual, and relatively free -- even while ultimately, in a manner they cannot sense, their progression is scripted and they're simply along for the ride? Where is the incoherence in such a scheme, from a logical and semantic point of view, leaving aside its truthfulness?
If determinism is true, then all of your experiences of things that suggest determinism is false is an illusion. Even if you pretend it's not an illusion, it's an illusion. Even if you construct a robust illusion of freedom, it's still an illusion. No matter how many words you throw at it, it's still going to be an illusion. You cannot escape that it's an illusion.
Quote:
If the illusion is deep enough, to what extent should it still be considered an illusion?
06-01-2010
, 08:12 PM
Quote:
If determinism is true, whether you were going to punish someone or not was already determined as well. If you punish someone, it's not as if you could *NOT* have punished him, and if you did not punish him, it's not as if you *COULD* have punished him. Pragmatism has nothing to do with it.
The question is meaningless because the script has already been written and everyone is just going through the motions.
The question is meaningless because the script has already been written and everyone is just going through the motions.
06-01-2010
, 08:14 PM
Dennett sure doesn't but I think he's wrong. Determinism = fatalism imo.
06-01-2010
, 08:17 PM
Quote:
You are sick with an illness. Either you are predetermined to die or predetermined to live due to this illness.
Should you go to a doctor?
Examining each outcome:
If you are predetermined to die tomorrow, you might as well not go to the doctor - he can't save you.
If you are going to live, you might as well not go to the doctor, since you are going to be fine.
Therefore it is always useless to go to a doctor, since you can extend the same argument for results of pain (Either you will continue to be in pain or you won't), sniffles, etc.
The basic error here is that this is absurd. The basic problems with "it doesn't matter" is that each event, in turn, causes future events.
Should you go to a doctor?
Examining each outcome:
If you are predetermined to die tomorrow, you might as well not go to the doctor - he can't save you.
If you are going to live, you might as well not go to the doctor, since you are going to be fine.
Therefore it is always useless to go to a doctor, since you can extend the same argument for results of pain (Either you will continue to be in pain or you won't), sniffles, etc.
The basic error here is that this is absurd. The basic problems with "it doesn't matter" is that each event, in turn, causes future events.
06-01-2010
, 08:34 PM
Carpal \'Tunnel
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 30,132
Edit: Or the other way around... tell me what you think fatalism is and show me how determinism as defined ITT does not follow from fatalism.
Feedback is used for internal purposes. LEARN MORE
Powered by:
Hand2Note
Copyright ©2008-2022, Hand2Note Interactive LTD