It sounds like that word "rational" needs to be defined before we even talk about whether determinism is self refuting. — Walter Pound
First, there is the physical world - the universe of physical entities...; this I will call "World 1". Second, there is the world of mental states, including states of consciousness and psychological dispositions and unconscious states; this I will call "World 2". But there is also a third such world, the world of the contents of thought, and, indeed, of the products of the human mind [such as stories, explanatory myths, tools, scientific theories (whether true or false), scientific problems, social institutions, and works of art]; this I will call "World 3"...
One of my main theses is that World 3 objects can be real...: not only in their World 1 materializations or embodiments, but also in their World 3 aspects. As World 3 objects, they may induce men to produce other World 3 objects and, thereby, to act on World 1; and interaction with World 1 - even indirect interaction - I regard as a decisive argument for calling a thing real. — The Self and Its Brain
by committing to determinism you forfeit any claim to rationality; in particular, you cannot support your belief in determinism by a rational argument. Thus, determinism is self-undermining (not self-refuting). — SophistiCat
Have you ever heard the claim that determinism is "self-refuting" because if one is determined to believe in determinism that somehow means that we do not rationally believe in determinism? — Walter Pound
Have you looked into Husserl? — sign
1. If the physical world is causally closed (this thesis Popper variously labels as materialism, physicalism or determinism), then it follows that the world of ideas is causally inert. (Some alternatives, such as the identity thesis, are rejected in separate arguments.)
2. Take any proposition, such as 1 + 1 = 2, or indeed the proposition that affirms the truth of physicalism. To what does it owe its truth? Both the proposition and any arguments in support of its truth are abstract ideas. But the physicalist only has the physical world at her disposal to make the argument. Nor can the abstract be reduced to the physical. Thus it follows that the physicalist cannot rationally support her own position. — SophistiCat
Supposing there was no intelligence behind the universe, no creative mind. In that case, nobody designed my brain for the purpose of thinking. It is merely that when the atoms inside my skull happen, for physical or chemical reasons, to arrange themselves in a certain way, this gives me, as a by-product, the sensation I call thought. But, if so, how can I trust my own thinking to be true? It's like upsetting a milk jug and hoping that the way it splashes itself will give you a map of London. But if I can't trust my own thinking, of course I can't trust the arguments leading to Atheism, and therefore have no reason to be an Atheist, or anything else. Unless I believe in God, I cannot believe in thought: so I can never use thought to disbelieve in God. — Lewis
Suppose we are asked to accept the proposition that all our rational assessments have sufficient - not just necessary - causal conditions. In order to show that we ought to believe this, someone would need to produce evidence which is seen to conform to criteria of reasonable trustworthiness and which is recognized to confer, by virtue of some principle of deductive or probable inference, certainty or sufficient probability upon it. But if the proposition is true, this could never happen, for it implies that whether anyone believes it and what he considers trustworthy evidence and acceptable principles of inference are determined altogether by conditions that have no assured congruence with the proposition's own merits or with criteria of sound argumentation whose validity consists of more than that we accept them. Whether we believe the proposition and what considerations we undertake before making a decision depend simply on sufficient and necessary causal conditions that logically need not be, and quite probably are not, relevant to the issues involved in assessing propositions for truth and arguments for validity. If our rational assessments are conditioned solely by factors whose exhaustive statement would omit mention of the recognized accordance of our deliberations with criteria of trustworthy evidence and correct inference, then the recognition of the relevance of these criteria is either inefficacious or absent. Of course, one still might occasionally believe what is true, but this would always be the out come of happy circumstances, never of reasoned investigation. And if this is true of our rational assessment of any argument, it is true of our attempts to determine the strengths and weaknesses of any argument for the proposition in question. If the latter is true, any argument for it is self-defeating, for it entails that no argument can be known to be sound. — Jordan
In The Self and Its Brain Popper cites biologist J. B. S. Haldane's argument (later retracted) from 1932: "...if materialism is true, it seems to me that we cannot know that it is true. If my opinions are the result of the chemical processes going on in my brain, they are determined by the laws of chemistry, not of logic." He traces the argument even further back, all the way to Epicurus: "He who says that all things happen of necessity cannot criticize another who says that not all things happen of necessity. For he has to admit that his saying also happened of necessity." ** — SophistiCat
Okay, so is his argument hiding a hidden premise? Is it the case that he believes that for knowledge to be possible that one must be able to have libertarian free will?if determinism is true, then (a) knowledge isn't possible — Terrapin Station
At any rate, that's problematic that Popper is conflating materialism/physicalism and determinism (in my opinion as a physicalist who isn't a determinist). — Terrapin Station
[N]o special interpretive model beyond the interpretive models used to account for natural events and processes is needed to account for the initiation of human actions; an additional interpretive model used to account for the initiation of actions is a needless proliferation of explanatory machinery. Reformulated in terms of our previous description of the ordinary man's understanding of his actions, determinism implies that there is no warrant for a naively realistic interpretation of the experience of choice among alternatives. Determinism, in the sense in which we are concerned with it here, must exclude any interpretation of that experience which involves a claim that there are really open possibilities among which it is up to the agent alone to choose. — Boyle, Grisez & Tollefsen
this denial either presupposes free will for the deliberately chosen response in making that denial, which is a contradiction, or else it is merely the automatic response of a nervous system built by genetic coding and molded by conditioning — Eccles
Right. So a determinist cannot interpret his opponent as asserting a contrary epistemological position. — sime
By his very belief in universal determinism, the determinist, if he is consistent, cannot interpret his opponent's sentence " I possess free will" to be an actual claim to possess an objective property. This is because if universal determinism is true then the only objective meaning the determinist can ascribe in his opponent's sentences are the physical causes that precipitated them. Therefore the determinist must understand his opponent's sentences to be trivially and necessarily correct in an epistemological sense whatever those sentences are, and to be 'wrongable' only in the conventional sense of disagreeing with the linguistic convention adopted by the determinist. — sime
"Rationality and determinism are incompatible. Why? Because you require free will in order to be rational. Why? Because if you lack free will, all you choices a determined i.e. determinism is true."
It appears that the conclusion is inserted into the premises of the argument. — Chany
No. The confusion arises out of making them distinct. Abstractions are causal. They cause us to behave in certain ways when they are in or mind. How did those words, "animals" and "design" get on the screen in your post if the abstractions, "animals" and "design" aren't causal?I think that Popper and Eccles really mean the sort of material determinism that takes the universe from one state to the next. If you admit the causal power of "animals" and "design" you are already stepping outside material determinism, into a situation where abstractions are causal. I think the two conceptions are distinct, and this could be the cause of some confusion. — Inis
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