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RE: An Argument Against Determinism
Yesterday at 2:34 pm
(Yesterday at 2:30 pm)Thumpalumpacus Wrote: (Yesterday at 2:19 pm)Ivan Denisovich Wrote: No.
Then you're stone-cold fuck-up. Stone-could fuck-up who might think that it is his choices that lead him to such stance or who might think that universe determined it for him. It's irrelevant because it was determined either way.
It could. Determinism only means that whatever you think or act isn't done by your choice (even if you think differently). It is determined that you held opinion x (or opinion y) but it's also determined that tomorrow you will hold opinion y (or continue holding opinion x). At least such is my take on it.
I don't think that free will is anything but excuse of religious types for their deity non-intervention so I suppose I'm closer to determinism spectra of things. I don't subscribe to it all the way though. In my view people have agency but are influenced by myriad of factors like cultural capital, upbringing or even money or lack of them.
Those questions were objections to the OP.
My mistake then.
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RE: An Argument Against Determinism
Yesterday at 7:53 pm
(Yesterday at 2:19 pm)Ivan Denisovich Wrote: It could. Determinism only means that whatever you think or act isn't done by your choice (even if you think differently). It is determined that you held opinion x (or opinion y) but it's also determined that tomorrow you will hold opinion y (or continue holding opinion x). At least such is my take on it. b-mine
That would take a truly narrow set of possible levers and outcomes I think, at least in a deterministic understanding of events. Let's dispense with the idea of changing our minds - maybe neither of us believes we're in the drivers seat there and that's what we're trying to express. The idea that our opinion tomorrow is set today suggests that there are no determinative externalities to the state of those opinions, either. Not only that we can't change it but that it can't be changed. At least not in the time between now and tomorrow.
Determinism seems to suggest otherwise, though, doesn't it? By tomorrow, there will (possibly) be 24 more hours of now future prior events which might affect the then-present outcome or opinion. If this is not true, or cannot be true (because said outcome or opinion is set today) then either determinism is false, or there just aren't many -or any- deterministic factors between now and then which can explain why one or some things happen while others don't.
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RE: An Argument Against Determinism
Yesterday at 9:00 pm
Serious question -- how might quantum probabilities affect deterministic outcomes?
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RE: An Argument Against Determinism
Yesterday at 11:32 pm
(Yesterday at 7:53 pm)The Grand Nudger Wrote: (Yesterday at 2:19 pm)Ivan Denisovich Wrote: It could. Determinism only means that whatever you think or act isn't done by your choice (even if you think differently). It is determined that you held opinion x (or opinion y) but it's also determined that tomorrow you will hold opinion y (or continue holding opinion x). At least such is my take on it. b-mine
That would take a truly narrow set of possible levers and outcomes I think, at least in a deterministic understanding of events. Let's dispense with the idea of changing our minds - maybe neither of us believes we're in the drivers seat there and that's what we're trying to express. The idea that our opinion tomorrow is set today suggests that there are no determinative externalities to the state of those opinions, either. Not only that we can't change it but that it can't be changed. At least not in the time between now and tomorrow.
Determinism seems to suggest otherwise, though, doesn't it? By tomorrow, there will (possibly) be 24 more hours of now future prior events which might affect the then-present outcome or opinion. If this is not true, or cannot be true (because said outcome or opinion is set today) then either determinism is false, or there just aren't many -or any- deterministic factors between now and then which can explain why one or some things happen while others don't.
I merely meant to say that changing one opinion does not invalidate determinism. All things are predetermined included changes (or lack of them) of one opinions and timespan of it.
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RE: An Argument Against Determinism
Yesterday at 11:54 pm
(Yesterday at 7:53 pm)The Grand Nudger Wrote: Determinism seems to suggest otherwise, though, doesn't it? By tomorrow, there will (possibly) be 24 more hours of now future prior events which might affect the then-present outcome or opinion. If this is not true, or cannot be true (because said outcome or opinion is set today) then either determinism is false, or there just aren't many -or any- deterministic factors between now and then which can explain why one or some things happen while others don't.
I think we're hopelessly subjective on the issue, and can't propound an answer that is not colored by our desire to think we are large and in charge. Even if that answer is determined by everything that has passed before us, how could we know the difference?
If determinism is true, how might our opinions expressed here even be free at all? I'm not arguing determinism must be true -- but I wonder how we might know the difference.
In essence, determinism is unfalsifiable.
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RE: An Argument Against Determinism
2 hours ago
(Yesterday at 11:54 pm)Thumpalumpacus Wrote: (Yesterday at 7:53 pm)The Grand Nudger Wrote: Determinism seems to suggest otherwise, though, doesn't it? By tomorrow, there will (possibly) be 24 more hours of now future prior events which might affect the then-present outcome or opinion. If this is not true, or cannot be true (because said outcome or opinion is set today) then either determinism is false, or there just aren't many -or any- deterministic factors between now and then which can explain why one or some things happen while others don't.
I think we're hopelessly subjective on the issue, and can't propound an answer that is not colored by our desire to think we are large and in charge. Even if that answer is determined by everything that has passed before us, how could we know the difference?
If determinism is true, how might our opinions expressed here even be free at all? I'm not arguing determinism must be true -- but I wonder how we might know the difference.
In essence, determinism is unfalsifiable.
Exactly. It pleases me to think that I decide what to have for breakfast, but there’s no way to know if my sitting down to eggs and bacon is an inevitable consequence of the Big Bang.
Boru
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