At the most basic level, things happen because they are caused by other things. — RepThatMerch22
That is a metaphysical claim that can at least be doubted with current evidence. At what is currently thought as the "most basic level", quantum mechanics, there are events which appear to not have a cause. Some reading on quantum mechanics and causation should at least be able to shake the foundation of faith in the stated quote.At the most basic level, things happen because they are caused by other things. — RepThatMerch22
My view is that determinism must be true.
At the most basic level, things happen because they are caused by other things. — RepThatMerch22
Free will must be an illusion. You only do things because something in your brain told you to. If you understood all the chemistry and physics behind the operation of your brain, you would be able to see why you do things. — RepThatMerch22
At the most basic level, things happen because they are caused by other things.
If you roll a pair of dice, the result is not random, but determined by the laws of physics. If you knew all relevant information (e.g. force of throw, distance of throw, angle of throw, nature of surface, etc.), you could figure out what the result would be.
Take that simple example and apply it to everything. The fact is that you couldn't have all the information to determine what could happen, for example, with human behaviour. But hypothetically if you did, then you would be able to predict it with ease. — RepThatMerch22
Since the discovery of quantum entanglement, you can't have determinism and causality; they are incompatible unless you make a radical change to our conception of the Reality.
Also, results like the Free Will Theorems of Kochen and Conway prove you can't have determinism and causality. — tom
No one has proven anything, it is a perfectly legitimatlt contested theorem — Pseudonym
No one has proven anything — Pseudonym
Take that simple example and apply it to everything. — RepThatMerch22
How different are we from ants, really? — RepThatMerch22
How different are ants from dice? — RepThatMerch22
Determinism is more than just casual. It claims everything is already determined. — Rich
You're missing the point of what I'm saying entirely. The simple fact is that some equally intelligent people have come to an alternative conclusion, as the paper I cited shows, meaning that nothing has been proven, it has only been theorised. — Pseudonym
Given the success science has had operating under a deterministic perspective, it seems reasonable to assume that the world operates deterministically, or at the very least under tendencies that do not radically differ whenever. — darthbarracuda
This implies fatalism which is not true. Nothing is 'already' determined in the sense it is know. Things are determined by antecedent conditions. That does not imply anything 'already'.
Unless you believe in God.
— charleton
Or you accept the consequences of General Relativity. — tom
↪charleton Precisely. North fatalism or Determinism describes nature. The Mind has choices in the direction it attempts to move. — Rich
Don't be silly! — tom
Oh well, if I'd known that the Oxford University journal was silly I wouldn't have been citing it all these years — Pseudonym
Allow me to repeat: I have not claimed that QM is deterministic or indeterministic. Can you understand that? — tom
What exactly in this article gives you hope for Determinism? — Rich
No. All choices are determined too. There is no way the brain is outside reality. — charleton
How so? — charleton
If it were not for determinism there would be no science at all, only magic. — charleton
That is a metaphysical claim that can at least be doubted with current evidence. At what is currently thought as the "most basic level", quantum mechanics, there are events which appear to not have a cause. Some reading on quantum mechanics and causation should at least be able to shake the foundation of faith in the stated quote. — Uneducated Pleb
No. All choices are determined too. There is no way the brain is outside reality.
— charleton
According to determinism. — BlueBanana
Well, you claimed, based on no argument, that fatalism isn't true. In which case General Relativity is not going to work for you, you are going to need a new theory. GR is fatalistic. — tom
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