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Does determinism really negate free will?

Cormack

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I’ve often wondered about evolutionary biology. One of the things that seems odd to me is that humans are the best of the best when it comes to surviving their own difficult individual circumstances (e.g. shelter, hunger, thirst, injury, illness.) Our behaviours are simply better than the competition.

The “odd” part though is that humanity worships, unlike any other animal, humanity (for its peak survival abilities) has landed on worshipping something. Over and above other animals we are the best truth finders too, so why doubt God, an object of worship from the greatest survivalists and truth finders on the planet?

God is uniquely believed by the most advanced beings we know, namely us. Trusting in the power of the evolutionary process kind of means trusting in our theistic thoughts, thoughts produced by the process.
 
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Occams Barber

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I agree with you up until this point.

Touching on my previous post, I’ve never met a rock with a personality. And your model of exhaustive reality hits a wall at entities such as rocks. So actually, I CAN speak of Christian biases and anthropomorphic biases…but you need a new model of reality to do so.

You've agreed that you (humans)" are composed of matter and energy your actions, at their most basic, are determined by the laws of physics" but you're still not happy that this is the basis of human behaviour.

What other factors, apart from physical laws produce human behaviour?

How would you modify, or add to, this simple rational statement:

• The Universe is composed of matter and energy
• Matter and energy act in accordance with the laws of physics
• You are part of the universe
• Therefore you are also composed of matter and energy
• Since you are composed of matter and energy your actions, at their most basic, are determined by the laws of physics
Suggesting you remove Christian and anthropomorphic biases was a way of trying to get you to think outside of the box
OB

 
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Vap841

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You've agreed that you (humans)" are composed of matter and energy your actions, at their most basic, are determined by the laws of physics" but you're still not happy that this is the basis of human behaviour.

What other factors, apart from physical laws produce human behaviour?

How would you modify, or add to, this simple rational statement:

• The Universe is composed of matter and energy
• Matter and energy act in accordance with the laws of physics
• You are part of the universe
• Therefore you are also composed of matter and energy
• Since you are composed of matter and energy your actions, at their most basic, are determined by the laws of physics

Suggesting you remove Christian and anthropomorphic biases was a way of trying to get you to think outside of the box

OB
I agree that human organisms lay on top of the foundation of the bullet points that you list, but novel properties emerge as you go up to higher levels above physics. Things happen at the level of chemistry that don’t happen at the physics level, novel properties emerge at the level of biology that don’t occur at the chemistry level, etc.

When we climb the ladder all the way to the novel emergent properties of psychology we now have an entire descriptive vocabulary to deal with this level. Which is the everyday language of psychological discourse…actions that people perform due to properties called beliefs, desires, fears, changes of mind, etc. The key point to stress is the difficulty there would be in stating that thoughts & feelings do not influence human behavior! And if it’s difficult to deny such a thing then what follows is that these mental properties are real properties that are accurately describing causal influences in the universe. They have causal influence over what our bodies do, and our bodies are entities in the physical universe.

So we know that physics is an accurate description of how to describe reality. And we also know that psychological discourse is an accurate description of how to describe reality. So these points start conflicting if the frameworks do not describe distinct things…

- Physics is an accurate description of reality.

- The laws of physics does not operate based on thoughts and feelings.

- Psychological discourse is an accurate description of reality. It accurately describes how human bodies act in the physical universe.

- These laws of human behavior operate based on thoughts, and feelings, and choices.

So an accurate descriptive framework of how reality works that is driven by thoughts and feelings can not reduce down to a descriptive framework of how reality works that is driven by blind mechanical laws of nature that has nothing to do with thoughts and feelings.
 
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Larniavc

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I see no reason to believe that God is “forcing” people to do things from behind the scenes, all the while causing us to feel that’s not the case.
Didn’t he harden Pharaoh’s heart?
 
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durangodawood

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....To argue that determinism negates free will seems to suggest that there's some neurotic form of you that's never sure what it's going to do. That's totally unpredictable. Would you rather that that's the case, that your will is totally neurotic? Or would you prefer that determinism simply means that what you choose to do, would always be what you would choose to do.....
You could comprehensively run through the reasons to make a decision, but still arrive at an impasse. Then perhaps you flip a coin or blindly trust intuition. Is that totally neurotic?
 
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Cormack

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Didn’t he harden Pharaoh’s heart?

Yes God did.

For the majority of the hardened heart verses it’s either the case that Pharoah’s heart simply “became hard,” or that he hardened his own heart. The hardening is either passive or by his own choice to sin.

Exodus 9:34
When Pharaoh saw that the rain and hail and thunder had stopped, he sinned again: He and his officials hardened their hearts.

God only steps in to somehow accomplish the later heart hardening, but not in the earlier instances.

An atheist can enlist the verses about passive hardening, Pharaohs heart hardening and God hardening Pharaohs heart as a list of contradictions in the Bible, while Calvinists and Lutherans can overemphasis and isolate the God related verses to push their determinism. The Bible however paints another picture.

The trouble is that the Bible doesn’t say how God is hardening Pharaohs heart, only that He’s doing it. For the author of Exodus it’s about the fact, not the method.

People who like determinism just read effectual divine coercion into the verses because reasons, and “sovereignty,” this and other buzz words that the movement has misappropriated over the years.

So what does it mean for God to harden hearts? Do we have explanatory biblical material to do with how God goes about hardening the hearts of men? We do. In Isaiah 6 and through Jesus’ use of Parables we can see Gods judicial hardening in effect. God commissions Isaiah into a ministry of heart hardening, while Jesus teaches in parables so as to harden the audiences heart against him.

Both of those actions are considered God hardening the heart by the biblical authors, those parables and that ministry of preaching hardly qualify as divine determinism however. Gods judicial hardening is simply to press sinful man and allow him to go his own way, it’s not determinism.

Anyone with children can understand that the more parents bang on about something, the harder some children resist. The usual theme of youthful rebellion.

We can even harden each other’s hearts about a certain topic or point of view online, cryptic use of language, repetition and antisocial behaviours are ways that someone else can (in part) influence us and cause our rapport to sour.

Only by hyper focusing on “God hardened pharaohs heart” can the exhaustive divine determinist smuggle their philosophy into the Bible. However much damage this does to the coherency of the verses, daily Christian living and plain old common sense, that’s an afterthought to many people. It’s all about their pet systematic.
 
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partinobodycular

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I agree that human organisms lay on top of the foundation of the bullet points that you list, but novel properties emerge as you go up to higher levels above physics. Things happen at the level of chemistry that don’t happen at the physics level, novel properties emerge at the level of biology that don’t occur at the chemistry level, etc.

When we climb the ladder all the way to the novel emergent properties of psychology we now have an entire descriptive vocabulary to deal with this level. Which is the everyday language of psychological discourse…actions that people perform due to properties called beliefs, desires, fears, changes of mind, etc. The key point to stress is the difficulty there would be in stating that thoughts & feelings do not influence human behavior! And if it’s difficult to deny such a thing then what follows is that these mental properties are real properties that are accurately describing causal influences in the universe. They have causal influence over what our bodies do, and our bodies are entities in the physical universe.

So we know that physics is an accurate description of how to describe reality. And we also know that psychological discourse is an accurate description of how to describe reality. So these points start conflicting if the frameworks do not describe distinct things…

- Physics is an accurate description of reality.

- The laws of physics does not operate based on thoughts and feelings.

- Psychological discourse is an accurate description of reality. It accurately describes how human bodies act in the physical universe.

- These laws of human behavior operate based on thoughts, and feelings, and choices.

So an accurate descriptive framework of how reality works that is driven by thoughts and feelings can not reduce down to a descriptive framework of how reality works that is driven by blind mechanical laws of nature, that has nothing to do with thoughts and feelings.
First let me say that I think that you did an absolutely awesome job of presenting your argument. Regardless of whether I agree with it or not. So kudos.

Second, I'm not going to try to pick it apart, I'm just going to see if I've got the series of emergent properties correct.
  1. Physics gives rise to chemistry.
  2. Chemistry gives rise to biology.
  3. Biology gives rise to consciousness.
  4. Consciousness gives rise to self-determination/free will.
If this is correct then I've got a couple of seemingly obvious questions.
  1. Is there something that belongs before physics on this list?
  2. Is there something that belongs after self-determination?
For example, one could argue that quantum physics naturally gives rise to the standard model of physics.
 
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partinobodycular

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You could comprehensively run through the reasons to make a decision, but still arrive at an impasse. Then perhaps you flip a coin or blindly trust intuition. Is that totally neurotic?
I would say definitely not. But I would also conjecture that the process of getting to the point of the coin flip has already eliminated those seemingly neurotic options.

But doesn't this mean that something has already acted to constrain your choices? To which one could argue that yes indeed it was their own conscious mind that did that, and that that process of refining one's choices is as much a part of free will as the actual coin flip is.

But this still harkens back to the question of whether that process of refinement is itself merely the result of basic physical processes and that the perception that one is in conscious control of that process is merely an illusion. Making free will appear to exist when it actually doesn't.

So again, we've arrived at an impasse, does free will exist or doesn't it?
 
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partinobodycular

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First let me say that I think that you did an absolutely awesome job of presenting your argument. Regardless of whether I agree with it or not. So kudos.

Second, I'm not going to try to pick it apart, I'm just going to see if I've got the series of emergent properties correct.
  1. Physics gives rise to chemistry.
  2. Chemistry gives rise to biology.
  3. Biology gives rise to consciousness.
  4. Consciousness gives rise to self-determination/free will.
If this is correct then I've got a couple of seemingly obvious questions.
  1. Is there something that belongs before physics on this list?
  2. Is there something that belongs after self-determination?
For example, one could argue that quantum physics naturally gives rise to the standard model of physics.
@Vap841, yes, I'm replying to my own post. Because I want to proffer a question.

Are we looking at emergent properties incorrectly? I.E one gives rise to the next, which gives rise to the next, and so on. But are they actually emergent properties, or simply necessary properties which will always exist in conjunction with each other, and never separately from or without the others?
 
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zippy2006

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…all of these terms and concepts are pure unintelligible gibberish to apply towards laws of nature. It sounds like talking about “The color of confidence.” Unless of course you left something out of your exhaustive model of reality. But you didn’t, you said everything is just the sum total of matter and energy acting in accordance to laws of nature.

True. The secular dogma that you are opposing is based on the idea that we know D with more certainty than P.
  • D: Everything which exists in the entire universe is reducible to nothing more than deterministic laws.
  • P: Things like personality, bias, guilt, and innocence exist.

@Occams Barber is claiming that our knowledge of D is so certain that it washes away any possibility of P, despite the fact that P stares us straight in the face every day of our lives and D is a universal empirical claim based on dozens of obscure and doubtful inferences mixed with a great deal of blind faith.

It is simply irrational to prefer D to P.
 
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Chesterton

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But that's really missing the point isn't it. It doesn't matter if you call a behavior irrational, or brilliant, or normal, or whatever. The fact that you won't run around naked in church is because there's something acting to restrict your behavior. It's not a physical restriction necessarily, it's not restricting what you can do, but none-the-less it's restricting what you'll choose to do. As I say it's not an absolute restriction, you could still choose to run around naked in church, but it does seem to be pretty effective.

So even if dualism is true, there are still things acting to restrict what you'll choose to do.
I just don't get why you insist on calling that kind of thing a restriction while in the same paragraph admitting it's not really a restriction. I guess the thing we humans most heavily "restrict" is the crime of murder, but there are still lots of murders. Are there some people who refrain from committing murder only because it comes with a heavy penalty? There probably are, but they're still free to change their mind any time.
 
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Chesterton

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First let me say that I think that you did an absolutely awesome job of presenting your argument. Regardless of whether I agree with it or not. So kudos.

Second, I'm not going to try to pick it apart, I'm just going to see if I've got the series of emergent properties correct.
  1. Physics gives rise to chemistry.
  2. Chemistry gives rise to biology.
  3. Biology gives rise to consciousness.
  4. Consciousness gives rise to self-determination/free will.
If this is correct then I've got a couple of seemingly obvious questions.
  1. Is there something that belongs before physics on this list?
  2. Is there something that belongs after self-determination?
For example, one could argue that quantum physics naturally gives rise to the standard model of physics.
Someone's bound to post this old gem. Might as well be me. ;)

purity.png
 
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durangodawood

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....But this still harkens back to the question of whether that process of refinement is itself merely the result of basic physical processes and that the perception that one is in conscious control of that process is merely an illusion. Making free will appear to exist when it actually doesn't.....
Choice making is basically the application of imagination to desire. Is the forging of imaginative vision a strictly physical deterministic process? Could be. But maybe not. Seems like its too soon to tell.
 
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partinobodycular

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I just don't get why you insist on calling that kind of thing a restriction while in the same paragraph admitting it's not really a restriction.
That's a perfectly reasonable argument. Don't I still have a choice to do "A", even though, for whatever reason, I'm never going to choose to do "A"?

Well that depends. Take for example, biases. We don't choose them, but they still serve to affect our choices. And to a degree which we're probably not even aware of. And what about other things? Like what we like, or who we're attracted to. Do we have conscious control over those things?

Which begs the question, how much do the things that I don't have control of ultimately affect the choices that I presume to have control of? Because if I don't have control of the basis upon which my choices are made, then am I really in control of them? Or do I just have the illusion of being in control of them?

To which one could argue that as conscious, rational beings we can recognize and compensate for those underlying biases. But if this were true wouldn't we all simply disregard our biases and come to the same logical conclusions? Yet we don't.

Which leads me to wonder, just how much of an influence do our biases and preconceptions actually have on our choices? And if we don't control those biases, then do we really have control of our choices?
 
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durangodawood

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...
  • D: Everything which exists in the entire universe is reducible to nothing more than deterministic laws.
  • P: Things like personality, bias, guilt, and innocence exist.....
But how do we know P are anything more than just very complex operations of D?
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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Like how child abusers argue that moral intuition is an illusion.
Er, no - I thought I'd explained that. Moral intuition is a subjective feeling, it implies nothing about how the world works, just how you respond to it. The feeling of free will concerns how the world objectively works. You can't be wrong about how you feel, but your feelings can be wrong about how the world is. I don't see how a feeling, in itself, can be illusory - its referent can be illusory (e.g. phantom limb syndrome), but the feeling is real enough.

Felt morals are from subjects sensing an objective realm of moral values and duties. The philosophically amoral however deny that this objective dimension exists, even while experiencing the objective moral values themselves. They have undercut their own means of understanding reality, like how you have with the experience of libertarian free choice.
The existence of objective moral values and duties is an unsubstantiated claim. Lacking belief in objective values doesn't mean lacking values. Empirically, morals and values are subjective and cultural. There are a few widely accepted rudimentary 'universals', but even they are honoured in the breach by different cultures.

Generic predispositions aren’t divine predestination (or any kind of determinism.)
Genetic predispositions; they're not divine anything, but they are deterministic in the sense that they determine how you're initially inclined to respond to the world.

Influences and experiences don’t cause your choices, rather they influence and inform you. The decisive reason of any choice is the chooser. Having genetics and past experiences aren’t going to do away with your own ability to choose.
What influences and informs you, has causal effect on your knowledge and how you feel. That's what choices are based on. Only a random selection (e.g. rolling a die) is free of the effects of influences and experiences, and it's arguable whether a random selection is a choice at all.

Your ability to choose is the product of your genetics and development, it's not guaranteed - there are genetic and developmental abnormalities, and physical injuries that can impair or destroy the ability to choose and make decisions (executive dysfunction).

But the ability to choose is not the same as the reasons for choice, which are determined by how you feel about the apparent options, and how you feel about things is also a product of your genetics and life experiences.

I’m not writing about your memory of moral experiences or your memory of libertarian choice, rather I’ve written about the immediate experience itself. You have direct access to these things, making them the absolute best guide to knowledge.
Immediate experience is the absolute best guide to knowledge of immediate experience, but it is not a particularly reliable guide to how the world is. We all have misleading experiences at times.

As people receive a sense of protection and satisfaction over determinism.
If you mean that determinism gives people a sense of protection and satisfaction, it's possible that some feel that way, but there is just as much uncertainty in the world for determinists as for everyone else. It can even make some people anxious that they can't change things (a mistake, btw).

Worse still they can feel helpless and unchosen by a God who has already decided they are doomed, these users are on CF daily.
So maybe some determinists get a sense of protection and satisfaction from it, and some feel helpless and unchosen by God - just as some religious believers get a sense of protection and satisfaction from their beliefs and some are plagued by doubts, uncertainties, and guilt (and some feel helpless and unchosen by a God who has already decided they are doomed)... It's not so surprising - people are all different; some are more anxious than others and some more confident - again, it's largely down to their genetic predispositions and their life experiences.

For determinists that feel helpless and unchosen by a God who has already decided they are doomed, I suggest they think carefully about whether determinism and a belief in God are really compatible (it sounds a bit odd). The closest to that I can think of are Calvinists, but I'm not sure they're really determinists, except in respect of whether they're saved or not. But then I'm no expert in Christian sects.

The big difference between philosophical determinism versus movies, music and books is that people can lay those things down for what they are, rather than insist they are the secrets to the hidden workings of the universe.

Books, movies and rollercoasters aren’t examples of mental compartmentalism, while believing every choice you make is already decided (while in the act of deciding yourself) is near insane for believers willing to contemplate the thing.
The point was about how you can get satisfaction, enjoyment, and reward from things you know are not real or not accurate representations of reality. For fictional media it sometimes means suspending your disbelief, for the determinist it means mostly accepting the way things seem (see below). But like the physicist who is happy most of the time to treat classical mechanics as an acceptable everyday approximation, sometimes it's useful or necessary to use a more accurate model.

Determinism doesn't mean you believe every choice is 'already decided' - the decision is not made until there's an outcome - but the outcome is inevitable. 'Decision' and 'choice' are the names we give to the process of arriving at an outcome. No one knows what the outcome will be until the process is finished.

Living as though you’re making choices while believing you don’t make choices is the definition of inconsistent.
Not at all, that's a semantic confusion. 'Choices' must be made whether you think they're deterministic or not. Either way, a 'choosing' is the name for the process of evaluating and selecting a preferred option, and the 'choice' is the selected option.

If you want inconsistency, contrast the belief in an afterlife of eternal happiness in the presence of a transcendent loving creator, with the desperation to stay alive in the most awful circumstances, and the terrible grief at losing a loved one you believe is going to a far better place, and that you'll be reunited with in a cosmic blink of an eye.

It’s a rejection when you experience freewill as being libertarian, yet deny that libertarian freewill exists. Again, it’s rejecting your own lived reality by definition.
No, it's recognising that how things superficially feel isn't always how they really are. In fact, once you get used to the idea, it feels quite natural to see choice as a complex deterministic process, and you realise that 'free will' is just a label to cover our lack of insight into, i.e. ignorance of, the underlying (unconscious) details of that process.

It's something that people have always done - reification - make up a label for something unexplained and treat it as a 'thing' in its own right.

Sure experiences can be mistaken, but that’s not much to go on when you have daily experiences and can accurately glean the world through those things.
If experiences can be mistaken, then you're not always accurately gleaning the world through them. Astrologers, homoeopaths, crystal healers, and so on, think they're accurately gleaning the world through their experiences, but empirical evidence shows that they're consistently mistaken.

Errors in hearing, sight and even on moral things doesn’t invalidate the experience itself, just having the tools help properly basic beliefs arise around those tools.
As I said, the experience is real enough but it may not accurately reflect the world. I don't know what you mean by "just having the tools help properly basic beliefs arise around those tools."

Likewise, having the experience of choice or that you and I could have done differently in any given situation is the foundation of knowledge.
How? Please explain.

When you reject those things you aren’t rejecting memory or spoon bending, you are rejecting human knowledge in its most accessible form.
Again, I'm not talking about rejecting them, I'm talking about how they're interpreted.

That’s not the standard definition of determinism though. Determinism is about your choices having been determined by external factors beyond your own control.
It wasn't intended to be a definition, and your description isn't a definition either. The simple definition is 'every event has a cause'.

It's true that for a determinist, choices are ultimately determined by factors outside their control, but that's partly because the idea of 'control' is ambiguous in this context. Individuals are products of factors outside themselves - they don't choose their parents or their early development or environment, which makes them the kind of individuals they are; their ongoing development is determined by experiences of events outside their control. So when they start making conscious decisions for themselves, they use a brain that is the product of factors outside their control to make decisions about events in the world that are outside their control.

You can say reasonably that by making these decisions they are taking control, but that's just another way of saying what we call 'taking control' is people deciding and acting on the events that impact them using brains developed and moulded by events outside their control ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

You could live normally without believing in objective moral values and duties too, you’d end up denying your own lived experiences and describing them as an illusion in conversation however.

It’s not an intellectually genuine way to live imo.
Most people I know don't believe in objective morals and duties (they'd ask "where do they come from? how do you know what they are?"), but they don't feel they're denying their lived experiences and they don't call them illusions because they understand that they've absorbed moral values and duties from the people they grew up with and as a result of their lived experiences. They see that this explains why different cultures can have different moral values.

That’s just word games to get you back into the safety of determinism though.
It's a different definition of free will, certainly, and it replaces an incoherent definition, which is good, but why do you think there's safety in determinism? You still have to make choices, you can still make bad decisions, you're still held responsible for your choices and actions, and people still like or dislike you for who you are and what you do.

I'm undecided about the utility of compatibilism, particularly when it's used in support of moral responsibility, which does, on the face of it, seem intellectually dishonest.

You’re misunderstanding the argument again. I’ll try one last time.

Believing that your moral experiences, experiences felt as being objective, to then believe that they are illusory (therefore not objective,) that’s a denial of your own lived experience.

To restate the earlier point. The moral experience is a certain type of knowledge, immediately experienced knowledge about the world in which we live. Denying that type of knowledge as an illusion leads into denying similar types of immediately experienced knowledge as being illusory too.
Our experiences appear to be different. I don't feel my moral experience is 'objective', I feel it's personal, i.e. subjective, very noticeably largely a product of my upbringing and education, refined by my later experiences. I'm very aware that other people have their own moral values and rank the values we have in common differently from me. I don't believe my moral experiences are illusory.

I don't deny knowledge about the world obtained through experience - that's how all knowledge is obtained, I just acknowledge that not all experience accurately reflects how the world is. Whether I'm happy or sad, have regret or satisfaction, or think something is right or wrong, they're all undeniably real feelings, but the experiences that made me feel that way may not have been accurate reflections of the world.

Are you an atheist?
Yes - it appears next to every post I make, under my name.
 
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Chesterton

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That's a perfectly reasonable argument. Don't I still have a choice to do "A", even though, for whatever reason, I'm never going to choose to do "A"?

Well that depends. Take for example, biases. We don't choose them, but they still serve to affect our choices. And to a degree which we're probably not even aware of. And what about other things? Like what we like, or who we're attracted to. Do we have conscious control over those things?

Which begs the question, how much do the things that I don't have control of ultimately affect the choices that I presume to have control of? Because if I don't have control of the basis upon which my choices are made, then am I really in control of them? Or do I just have the illusion of being in control of them?

To which one could argue that as conscious, rational beings we can recognize and compensate for those underlying biases. But if this were true wouldn't we all simply disregard our biases and come to the same logical conclusions? Yet we don't.

Which leads me to wonder, just how much of an influence do our biases and preconceptions actually have on our choices? And if we don't control those biases, then do we really have control of our choices?
I'll pick out three words you use - affect, influence and control. AFAIK no free willers like me deny that there are many things which affect and influence our choices. But I'd deny that anything other than our own mind ultimately controls our choices. Even then I'd agree that we don't have complete control, or what Alvin Plantinga calls "maximal autonomy". We cannot choose our genetics or our upbringing for example, but we can still freely make choices given the material and biases we have.
 
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partinobodycular

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I'll pick out three words you use - affect, influence and control. AFAIK no free willers like me deny that there are many things which affect and influence our choices. But I'd deny that anything other than our own mind ultimately controls our choices.
That's a fair point, influence and affect don't by default rise to the level of control. But I'm left wondering, what's this "me" that's somehow capable of overcoming all of those influences and biases, and then acting in opposition to them? After all aren't those influences and biases the very things that serve to form the basis of my choices in the first place? So how can I act against the very things by which I choose that act?
 
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Vap841

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  1. Physics gives rise to chemistry.
  2. Chemistry gives rise to biology.
  3. Biology gives rise to consciousness.
  4. Consciousness gives rise to self-determination/free will.
If this is correct then I've got a couple of seemingly obvious questions.
  1. Is there something that belongs before physics on this list?
  2. Is there something that belongs after self-determination?
For example, one could argue that quantum physics naturally gives rise to the standard model of physics.
I’m sure that the list of levels can get larger and more technical, but yes you get the idea.

Social sciences like sociology, politics, groupthink, etc. would be patterns that are above psychology. Like ecosystems being above individual animals.
@Vap841Are we looking at emergent properties incorrectly. I.E one gives rise to the next, which gives rise to the next, and so on. But are they actually emergent properties, or simply necessary properties which will always exist in conjunction with each other, and never separately from or without the others?
All that I see are necessary conjunctions. Not only do these specific psychology properties need to be embodied with biological functions and everything on down, but they don’t even emerge without a specific necessary large brained mammal “Meat bag of physics” haha.
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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But I just noted that the same objection applies to determinism. How do you propose determinism could be falsified? And if neither can be falsified, then why think that this is a special problem for LFW?
Determinism could, presumably, be falsified by good evidence for acausality, i.e. randomness. But I didn't say this was a special problem for LFW, I said LFW appears incoherent.

Science itself presupposes freedom (as does any adequate account of knowledge).
I think it just requires that we can construct models from our observations that work, i.e. they are consistent, coherent, make fruitful predictions, have explanatory power, etc.

Again, even this much is false.
I think not ;)

The relevant question is whether it is possible to avoid, and this question underwrites the false equivalence of these sorts of analogies that you propose:
I don't see the problem - you can reason that the world, including yourself, is deterministic, yet feel that it's hard to live out day to day whatever you think a determinist lifestyle should involve - because you are not accustomed to doing so. The degree of success you have in that you will depend on the kind of person you are.

I don't think this problem is significantly different from the way people find it hard to live up to their lifestyle philosophies or worldviews in other areas, e.g. religious worldviews. How many Christians find it easy to consistently adhere to the fundamental tenets of their belief system?

But it seems to me that most people that think the world is deterministic don't feel they have to live any different to anyone else, for the most part. But I think there are times when acknowledging it at the scale of human behaviour and interaction can potentially help reduce suffering and increase wellbeing and flourishing.

A mistake that someone can be held accountable for. Can you hold someone accountable for things they were physically incapable of avoiding?
That's the point - what it means to be accountable. For a determinist, the individual that makes the mistake is the responsible agent that could not do otherwise in those circumstances. So a reasonable course would be to act to undo or reduce the deleterious effects of the mistake and take steps to make it unlikely to happen again. How that is done would depend on the society, but a way that seems to produce particularly good results is restitution by, and education, rehabilitation, or treatment of, the individual, where possible.

Building off of this notion of a (true) mistake, knowledge itself presupposes the ability to make mistakes, the ability to be correct or incorrect, and the ability to assert things truly or falsely. It presupposes the (free) ability to have one's thesis correspond or not correspond to what is true. If we can't fail, then we can't succeed, and if we can't succeed, then we can't have knowledge, and if we can't have knowledge, then determinism cannot be known, nor can it even be "true" in a real epistemic sense.
There are many different concepts of truth, but one's thesis depends largely on one's knowledge, which is a result of experience (e.g. education) and can be correct or incorrect by correspondence to the results of observation, i.e. testing, or correspondence to a belief system or worldview (coherence truth), or according to its logic (formal truth), and so on.

Why do you assert that it requires 'freedom'? If what you have learned is correct by whatever measure is used to assess it and you assemble your thesis correctly, e.g. rationally & logically, based on that knowledge, then your thesis is likely to correspond to the truth by that measure. If your knowledge is incorrect by that measure and/or you assemble your thesis incorrectly, i.e. you make errors, then your thesis will not correspond to the truth by that measure.

What is 'true' in a real epistemic sense depends on your framework - truths about the world necessarily fall short of absolute certainty (although we generally accept 'beyond reasonable doubt', and 'for all practical purposes').

This is because the proposition that we use to represent its meaning cannot have the crucial quality of truth-indeterminateness that propositions are required to have (what the Medieval logicians termed 'enuntiabilia').
The proposition we use to represent the meaning of what? - truth? knowledge? determinism?
 
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