Headsprouter said:
You sure you're not looking at my point the wrong way?
In your original post, you said why Determinism was the correct perspective, I said why this wasn't the right attitude to have, and that it was by your definition. I at no point said you were wrong.
Second post, you tell me why my vision of the consequences were wrong, saying criminals will still be punished.
This is true, research has shown punishment works to condition a subject, Pavlov, Skinner n' shit. Classical, Operant conditioning, all that good behaviourist stuff. Yes, it's logical and has been proven to be so.
You talk about whether the perspective is true, and I talk about whether the perspective works in creating a good society. We encourage people to direct anger inward because it's "socially acceptable". Either that or to find a socially acceptable release. Freud (or somebody, I think it was Freud, it's definitely some psychodynamic theory kind of stuff) said that a person who loved to cut flesh might find a socially acceptable release for that. "I'll become a surgeon!"
But I'm getting off topic, again.
"What will be will be" is something that is only ever said to someone right before something is about to occur, or any time afterwards. If I say "just let the world decide!" at all times people tend to just sit around a do nothing if they really take that advice to heart.
Sometimes a fatalist attitude is blamed for a culture not ascending in worth. Remember when I said there were advantages to certain cultural and religious perspectives? Fatalism hasn't been praised as one of them, and determinism, as you speak of it, is fatalism.
So what I'm saying to you, as I interpret what you are saying, is "Yes, but people can't think that way! It's not even programmed into us!"
And don't accuse me of putting word in your mouth, I quoted your words once, and I merely paraphrased. Geez...
At least tell me why I'm wrong.
1. Determinism isn't about "perspective" it's a logical construct. The principle of cause and reaction is basic and Determinism is just taking that concept to it's logical conclusion. If every reaction had a cause, there's a chain of cause-reaction pairs leading back to the first cause, let's simply call it Bigbang for now.
2. I give you that it's similar to fatalism, but: It's a neutral position. "What happens, happens" doesn't mean, don't care about what happens. It's just that the Cause-Reaction machinery is all set up and running, so obviously whatever happens had to happen because all the causes & reaction before hand, but that's just a statment done from OUTSIDE the system.
3. On the inside of the system, we poor souls dabble around: This is the part where the "Illusion of free will" comes into play. We think we're free to choose between Pepsi and Cola in the supermarket, but our expiriences, genes, mood, tastes and what not actually determine what we're going to buy, there's a logical process behind it. So we have to go on as we always did. Strive for peace, perfection and/or happiness or whatever goals we have. Follow the biological + evolutionary pressure.
4. Back to the point with the criminals. There will be people that steal, there have to be people that punish those who steal. From outside of the system, it's all logical. How all those things like society, the thiefs reasons to steal or the need for punishment of criminals came to place be could be traced through following all the cause.
Again: It's a neutral position. Determinism doesn't say don't care about that criminal. It says: It had to happen, that this criminal steals and it had to happen that this officer arrested him.
But from inside the system we can't KNOW beforehand and that's exactly why we have to just go on.
That's why alot of people already said: Determinism has no influence over our daily lives, because we're not capable of predicting the future. We can only verify/falsify what already happened. Still, there's no free will.
5. Read Post #44 and #48 by II2 and Arkasi respectivley. There's also a scientific part to this. The Quote from Harris is a really good one. Either we're not free or there are random occurences, in which case we're still not free but bound to a galactic RNG. Our brain does not cause causes. Thought's are processes of our synapses which on the other hand react on the environment & chemicals, which are again influenced by our genes etc.
On this note: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Determinism is a good way to get a broad overview about the topic.
6. I hate determinism. I hate that we apparently have no free will. In a summer 2 or 3 years ago i spent roughly 30-40 hours per week for 2 or 3 weeks discussing Determinism with 2 friends of mine. Some discussion lasted like 12-14 hours in one go.
But it's just the most logical concept there is. I acknowledge the principle of action-reaction, thus i've to acknowledge determinism, even though i hate it. I hope quantum phsysics maybe shake things up abit and experiments like the "double-slit" still leave room for discussion.
Sidenote: Determinism acutally gives the theorethical possibility of knowing everything that happens and has happened in the universe. If you have the knowledge about every particle in the universe and can observe every cause->reaction, then you can 100% predict the future - and the past.