It turns out that freely-willed choices are perfectly consistent with determinism: we make choices because of a variety of factors within ourselves, factors that were caused by things outside ourselves (what we're taught, genetics,desires...). — Relativist
The process of making a choice is entirely yours, and the factors that led you to make that choice were entirely within you. Each of those factors was caused - something caused you to hold a belief, or to have a desire or predilection, but the choice itself was a product of you - just like the Grand Canyon was a product of the Colorado river. — Relativist
The choice has been determined, and it was predictable - but only in principle. In principle, the shape of the grand canyon was predictable at the big bang, the shaping process still required a long series of prior steps to get there. — Relativist
Mirage?
Compatibilism is the notion that our choices are indeed freely willed, because they are OUR choices: all the factors that influence the choice are internal to ourselves: beliefs, feelings, impulses, etc. — Relativist
Some of us old folks feel that we make better decisions than we did when we were young, and this is because we know more (and are somewhat less driven by hormones). This too is consistent with a compatibilist account of free will. — Relativist
Therefore my will would have been predicated by a different set of causes. Determinism stands.The choices you make are still YOUR choices, not someone else's.
You could have made a different choice, for example:
had you better understood the consequences
had you placed more weight on the long term vs the short term — Relativist
topic, it's Wittgenstein's approach to dissolving philosophical problems by saying that language goes on holiday when philosophers fail to understand words in their proper language games. — Marchesk
Marchesk
2.6k
I don't understand this. I frankly admit it. What's universalism? Nominalism? Conceptualism? Platonism?
— god must be atheist
The problem of universals. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/universals-medieval/
I used it as an example, because it's easy to say how it might be stated as philosophers playing with feces while missing the deeper point it raises.
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Marchesk
2.6k
What IS the problem? Shouldn't we spell out in plain, simple language, what the problem is, before attempting to solve it?
— god must be atheist
The NY Times had a good article on this a few years ago: https://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/03/was-wittgenstein-right/ — Marchesk
If Wittgenstein is right that a certain use of language is misleading, how did that start? — Valentinus
Philosophers playing with their feces. — Bitter Crank
If it's the latter, then the problem is ordinary language, not philosophy. — Marchesk
Here we need to ask ourselves how did philosophy arise? — Marchesk
So we see that the problem isn't an abuse of language — Marchesk
Take the example of the problem of universals. A philosopher might ask why language is full of universal concepts if the world is full of individuals. This leads to attempts to resolve the paradox such as nominalism, conceptualism, and platonism. But the Wittgenstein approach would be that attempting to answer such questions is pointless. Instead, the question should be dissolved by understanding that universal talk is a generalizing short-cut for having to specify everything about an individual. — Marchesk
"There can be phenomena without a cause" isn't at all inconsistent with "We never observe phenomena with no cause."If there can be one thing in some far-flung corner of the universe that occurs, just one time, with no cause, then "There can be phenomena without a cause" is true even though "We never observe phenomena with no cause" is also true. — Terrapin Station
↪god must be atheist Well reasoned counter arguments would be nice instead of waffle. — Devans99