Pretty sure that means that society/instincts are keeping us from killing ourselves (the "coercive establishment"). — darthbarracuda
Okay, there is such an incentive. If you don't do it, you literally die painfully. What more incentive do you want? — The Great Whatever
It obviously doesn't, since I've explicitly included suicide among those possible actions. — The Great Whatever
There actually are coercive mechanisms keeping people alive to suffer once they are born, such as survival instincts, the general pain attending dying, guilt, shame and illegality of suicide (including censure from family members, government, and religion, sometimes threats of burning in hell for eternity), and so on.
You are simply wrong in your description; people go apeshit at the idea of suicide, and there are systematic and painfu pressures in place to keep the coercive institution going once in place. — The Great Whatever
Finally, even if suicide were completely free, birth would still be coercive, because one cannot consent to it. The fact that it might be possible to undo does not make it any less forced (and much of the pain endured happens before it is possible to kill oneself). — The Great Whatever
I'm interpreting this as meaning suicide is indeed not a viable choice. — darthbarracuda
The rest is about how people instill incentives against suicide. That doesn't mean suicide can't be possible or viable -- I've assumed it is this whole time because people, after all, do it (but then often in great pain or duress because of the mechanisms that act against them). — The Great Whatever
You simply don't understand what I'm saying. You really don't. — Hanover
You can't judge the quality of my argument if determinism is true. — Hanover
I'm certainly under a kind of pressure to continue to breathe, but I don't mind it. — darthbarracuda
Also, I would like to point out that if you reject compatibilism in favor of hard determinism, and then complain that there is no free will and that everything is coerced, then you have to admit that your own thoughts of being coerced were in fact just determined. There is no coercion at all in hard determinism, there is just the natural flow of causality. — darthbarracuda
Yes you do, hold your breath for three minutes. — The Great Whatever
It doesn't matter whether my thoughts are determined or not to whether they're true. — The Great Whatever
I would say I'm a 'hard indeterminist' overall, but acknowledge (a) that certain local configurations for all intents and purposes can be modeled as hard deterministic, and (b) there may exist a certain kind of narrow freedom that arises in exceptional cases, but I'm not so confident on this point. — The Great Whatever
Any casual relationship, by definition, has one state relating out of another. Agents are states. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Unfortunately, life itself is such a coercive situation, since it is impossible to consent to being born, and all 'decisions' made while alive are within the context of that coercive establishment. — The Great Whatever
Why not? The qualities that make a good argument would be the same either way, all we have to do is look and see. — The Great Whatever
Whether your reasons are true would just be happenstance. Maybe they are, maybe they're not. — Hanover
That doesn't follow. — The Great Whatever
Why do I think the earth is flat? The same reason you think the earth round. It's because the laws of nature caused me to believe that. — Hanover
That doesn't follow. — The Great Whatever
So what exactly do you think follows from that? Above you said this means that whether the beliefs are true is just happenstance. But this simply does not follow. — The Great Whatever
Your position is plainly ridiculous. — Hanover
What follows from this is that the inadequacy of compatiblism is not that free will is incompatible with determinism, but it's that determinism negates the possibility of knowing anything. — Hanover
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.