You are confusing what might be evolutionary beneficial with determinism. Everything is determined. A lot is beneficial.
Actually that is only part of evolution theory. Basically its population genetics. So everything including behaviour is reduced to genetics. In fact if you trace everything back it arrives at the cellular level which is the reducible mechanism. Its not about benefits but elimination of genes that don't have a survival advantage according to natural selection.
That's reciprocal altruism. Not true altruism. There's no need to get derailed in me explaining the difference.
Actually evolution theory came up with reciprocal altruism to explain altruism. Thats because no determinist explanation could account for it. True altruism is putting someone above yourself and the ultimate act is laying down your life for another. No deterministic explanation can account for this.
It's not that people believe that something is true without evidence. You are missing the point completely. It's that believing something doesn't make it true. That is SO obvious that I'm not to goingto address it further.
It sort of does. I think theres different qualities of belief and we qualify those beliefs all the time and not just though science. Like intuition when we have a strong belief about something like its a geiger counter for lies or mischief. We can't put our finger on why but it often turns out correct.
So sometimes beliefs are a sign of something is true. But not measured just by logic or rationalism but rather some sense that cannot be reduced to deterministic measuresd.
Of course. But that has no relevance. Determining which is the option you really prefer is a given.
If thats the case then why the soul searching. Why the pros and cons and anguishing over making the decision. I don't think its as much a given as you say. I knew it I wanted to end my life, make my kids lose their father, leave my family unsupported, give up my ambitions and my dreams and end it all. I don't think many people feel that way unless they are suicidal.
Not giving your life and giving your life has the same outcome? You literally said 'there's no difference'.
You missed the point. I am talking about value as far as the worth of the act of self sacrifice. In reality we honor those who sacrifice their lives and we say those who don't are cowards.
But according to Hard Determinism theres no difference in value between sacrificing your live for another and not doing it. They both could not be helped as their were already determined. As you said they were always going to choose the one they preferred.
Reciprocal altruism. It's an evolutionary term. There is a huge difference between that and true altruism.
No matter what you use to explain altruism if your a Hard Determinist you are going to use these reductive mechanisms. The problem is these don't work. They fall short and don't capture what is actually happening.
So I would like to hear your determinist explanation for true altruism.
I am talking about the basic instincts that most species share and especially mammals. To mate, form groups, safety, get food, shelter and nesting. But humans are higher order thinkers and conscious.
Determinist tend to think at the basic level. The physical needs. Whereas with Maslows hierarchy of needs humans had more dimensions going up through the psychological and emotional to the sefl realisation and spiritual with transcedence at the top as the ultimate dimension of human attainment.
So yes No free will at the basic deterministic level but Yes free will at the self realisation and spiritual level which transcends mechanical determinism.
Making choices does Not mean that free will exists. Please stop making this error.
But we should expect that free will involves making free choices. But yes its the type of choice. You could say the quality of that choice thats important as this involves our conscious deliberations. In other words we get entangled into the situation and this can over ride deterministic influences. As Kane says its the Self Forming Actions and Choices at those soul searching times.
I have no idea why. I already know them. It's your job to refute them, not repeat them.
I just told you I am repeating them to refute them at the same time. But I don't need to refute them as I mentioned its well acknowledged that Determinist explanations are inadequate to explain morality, consciousness, free will and agency. Like with how evolutionary explanations have been undermined.
Unless you have some special example that is outside this framework for Determinism I have not seen any that past the test.
I know my position and what it entails. You haven't even started to refute it. You might spend some time thinking about howw you're going to do that.
I don't need to. As I said thats already been done for me. Its common knowledge. Why do you think the jury is still out on whether Free Will exists or not. The same with consciousness and morality and the debate will go on.
Every arguement you have has been tried before and failed. Thats unless you have some secret arguement that no one has come up with. Please tell as this could be revolutionary.
Reciprocal altruism. It doesn't mean the same thing as altruism. Which doesn't really matter as far as you're concerned as there's no free will involved in either.
Thats what I more or less said. I would be interested in seeing how you differentiate true altruism deteterministically from
Reciprocal altruism deterministically. I don't think it can be done. It ends up converging to the same basic reductive mechanisms.
And thats the point. No matter what explanation you give its always going to fall short for capturing the lived reality of free will. Just like whatever reductive determinist explanation you give for consciousness doesn't explan its nature. Only direct lived experience can explain its nature.
Two thousand posts and you're not sure? You'd be better off concentrating on how to present your own argument rather than how I'm presenting mine. You're not doing a great job at either at the moment.
Lol but thats the point. No one can explain the determinist view as its incoherent. We will keep forever be arguing from two different category destinction and will never meet in the middle.
I have been explaining presenting my arguement. A large part of that is showing how incoherent the determinist position is. How inadequate it is.
The second part is attempting to explain the category destinction in what we are talking about. We areboth coming from different metaphysical assumptions about reality. Yours the deterministic, mechanical and reducible. Mine the subjective experience which is indeterminant and irreducible to the mechanical and determined.
You assume a material reality and I one that transcends this. So already your trying to hold me to your assumed metaphysical outlook and I am disagreeing and resisting. Its not as case of giving specific examples of behaviour. Its about whether your assumed metaphysical belief is correct that we should only know the world and reality this way. Or be open to other possibilities.
At the very least you cannot hold anyone to your metaphysical assumptions because ultimately its a belief and as you said "just because you believe something doesn't make it true" remember.