Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Well, So Long As They Are Not Just Any Old Preferences

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This will be my last post on this subject.  In the comments to my prior post, groovamos wrote a comment that contains a personal history followed by a gut wrenching story (which is in bold):

I am in no sense as qualified as most on this thread to debate philosophy. However as one who embraced materialism TWICE in my youth, separated by a 3 year period of interest in mysticism, I’ll have a go.

At the end of sophomore year I had converted to the typical campus leftist stance of the day, cultural zeitgeist being the driver, sexual license sealing the deal. Not outwardly religious as a kid, I quickly gave up belief in a supreme being. And just as naturally I gave up any belief in ‘truth’ as something relevant to all human activity, and sure enough out the window was any belief in ‘evil’ as a concept. Soon enough I found that lying was acceptable as long as it was me doing it. Especially since I was self assured as one with a degree in a difficult discipline (hip too, self-styled). And who enjoyed hedonistic pursuits and shallow short term relationships. And lying sort of fit into the whole picture.

But here is the interesting part looking back on it. Whenever I would read in the news of acts of insane depravity and wickedness, I would go into a mentally confused state and would feel like I had no bearings in order to process what I had just encountered. It was extremely uncomfortable. I’m talking about the acts of Jeffery Dahmer, and others. One of these I remember that particularly caused me disorientation as if I, the atheist, were the one that might risk insanity just thinking about it (in the early ’80′s).

In this particular case the police arrived at a house where a man had just dismembered and sliced up his mom, her screams having been heard by neighbors. The man did not notice the police had entered and was found masturbating with a section of rectum he had excised. When asked how he had disposed of his mother’s breasts, he said “I think I ate them”.

Congrats to any atheist on here finding the story ‘unfavorable’. Congrats on your faith that someday ‘science’ will discover every event in the long chain for that experience. ‘Science’, answering all questions, will describe for you every neural, synaptic event, every action potential, every detailed cascade of chemical analogues and concentration gradients in your visual system and brain. And you will know EXACTLY the complete ‘science’ behind your disfavoring the story, so it will fit like a glove over your materialist philosophy, and maybe even reveal why the guy did it. And if you are a little disoriented, like I seriously was, you may be saved from that in future by ‘science’.

In the very next comment Mark Frank writes (Mark added the bold, not I):

The OP quotes me but omits a paragraph which I think is important. Here is the complete text:

As a materialist and subjectivist I agree with Seversky:

A ) Personal preferences can be reduced to the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of each person’s brain.

B) There is no such thing as objective good and evil.

C) Statements about good and evil are expressions of personal preferences.

(I would add the proviso that these are not any old preferences. They are altruistic preferences that are deeply seated in human nature and are supported by evidence and reasoning. They are also widely, but not universally, shared preferences so they are often not competing.)

Now, of course, the point of this entire exercise has been to demonstrate a truth, which I will illustrate by the following hypothetical dialogue between Mark and the man in groovamos’s story (let’s call him “John” for convenience):***

Mark: John, dismembering and eating your mother is evil, and by ‘evil’ I mean ‘that which I do not personally prefer as a result of impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain.”

John: But Mark, I preferred to dismember and eat my mother. Otherwise I would not have done it; no one forced me to after all. Therefore, under your own definition of good and evil it was “good,” which you tell me means ‘that which I personally prefer as a result of impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain.”

Mark: Not so fast John, I would add a proviso that my preference is not just any old preference. It is an altruistic preference that is deeply seated in human nature and is supported by evidence and reasoning. It is also widely, but not universally, shared. And your preference is none of these things.

John: Are you saying that your preference not to dismember and eat your mother, which preference resulted from the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of your brain, is objectively and demonstrably good, and that therefore my preference to dismember and eat my mother, which preference also resulted from the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain, is objectively and demonstrably evil?

Mark: Of course not. There is no such thing as objective good and evil.

John: Well at least you are being consistent, because we both know the electro-chemical system in your brain just is. And as Hume demonstrated long ago, “ought” cannot be grounded in “is.” Your preference just is. My preference just is. Neither is objectively superior to the other.

Mark: Certainly that follows from my premises.

John: You can say your preference is “good” but if good is defined as that which you prefer you are saying nothing more than “my preference is my preference.” Your little proviso, Mark, does not make your preference anything other than your preference; certainly it does not demonstrate that it is in any way more good than my preference. So, my question to you is, why do you insist on the proviso?

Mark: _____________ [I will let Mark answer that]

I will give my answer as to why Mark insists on his proviso. He has the same problem Russell did: “I cannot see how to refute the arguments for the subjectivity of ethical values, but I find myself incapable of believing that all that is wrong with wanton cruelty is that I don’t like it.” Russell on Ethics 165/Papers 11: 310–11.

Russell was incapable of believing the conclusions that followed ineluctably from his own premises. Dissonance ensued. For most people materialism requires self deception to deal with the dissonance of saying they believe something that it is not possible for a sane person to believe. Thus WJM’s dictum: “No sane person acts as if materialism is true.”

So why does Mark insist on his proviso that in the end makes absolutely zero difference to the conclusion that must follow from his premises? He is trying to cope with his dissonance.

If my premises required me to engage in acts of self-deception in order to cope with dissonance, I hope I would reexamine them.

___________
***I am not saying Mark has said or would say any of these things. I am saying that the words I put in his mouth follow from his premises. If he does not believe they do, I invite him to demonstrate why they do not

Comments
I find this interesting also ... from the Wikipage:
Luther in response maintained that sin incapacitates human beings from working out their own salvation, and that they are completely incapable of bringing themselves to God. As such, there is no free will for humanity because any will they might have is overwhelmed by the influence of sin. ... people do not choose between good or evil, because they are naturally dominated by evil, and salvation is simply the product of God unilaterally changing a person's heart and turning them to good ends. [emphasis mine]
There is no free will in that view. The believe that we do have free will is considered an error - so it's an illusion.Silver Asiatic
April 20, 2015
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5MM Interesting stuff but I am still not clear. Would you say we have free will now or the illusion of free will?Mark Frank
April 20, 2015
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Hey MF I'm saying that because of our original libertarian freewill human responsibility is "compatible" with our diminished freedom now. We have freedom now in the sense that we can do what we want. Our bondage is internal not external to us. We are constrained by our own "fallen" nature Actually I'm saying much more than that. Here are the bullet points 1)we had libertarian freewill to sin or not before the fall 2)the unregenerate is unable not to sin. 3)The regenerate is again able to sin or not. 4)The glorified saint will be unable to sin. If you want details probably the best thing to do is check out the Bondage of the Will by Martin Luther http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Bondage_of_the_Will Or Human Nature in Its Fourfold State by Thomas Boston. http://www.biblesnet.com/Thomas%20Boston%20Human%20Nature%20in%20its%20Fourfold%20State.pdf They lay out the traditional understanding quite well. Learning a little history would do us all good. ;-) peacefifthmonarchyman
April 20, 2015
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5MM Your position on free will fascinates me. I think you are saying that we no longer have free will having lost it during the fall. So do we now have the illusion of free will or is it something that we just don't know about?Mark Frank
April 20, 2015
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SB various places
By contrast, compatibilism holds that he could not have chosen to curb the habit before it made a slave of him. Under those circumstances, he would not be accountable. Compatibilism is totally alien to personal responsibility.   Determinism means determinism, which rules out the prospect of a self-directed life style.   Compatibilism claims that we have no such volitional power, ruling out the possibility of moral growth, personal responsibility, and legal accountability.
You may not agree with compatibilism but please do not describe it as something other than what it is.  Compabitilism is the claim that determinism is compatible with  our everyday experience of making voluntary decisions for which we incur personal responsibility.  If by “volitional power”, “self-directed” and “free will” you mean something different to our everyday experience of making voluntary decisions please do explain.   WJM 151
The question, though, is if it makes any sense, and if it is reasonable, to label what happened a free will choice.
Sure. And compatibilism challenges you to ask – why not?
Do you really think that most jurors that judge the responsibility of a defendant are thinking in materialist terms?
I think they think in terms of free will. This does not address whether this is compatible with materialism.Mark Frank
April 20, 2015
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fifthmonarchman
I don’t expect you to see things my way. I just hope you can see the huge difference between what folks like me believe and the “materialist compatablism” MF is advocating.
Yes, it is good that we could get all that on the table, I think that our (free) will was wounded by the fall while you think it was extinguished. That explains a great deal. Yes, now that you have fine-tuned your point, I think I understand how and why you differ from Mark. Thank you for making the clarification. Onward Peace!StephenB
April 19, 2015
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Hey StephenB. You are correct, that is the difference between us. I hold that when the bible speaks of us being dead in our sins it is not using hyperbole. We truly died spiritually the day Adam ate the fruit. I think the fall had catastrophic effects on us as well as on the rest of creation. Christ's rescue mission is a mission of liberation on much more than the material universe. quote: For all who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God. For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, "Abba! Father!" (Rom 8:14-15) and For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of him who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption and obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God. (Rom 8:20-21) end quote: long live true FREEDOM !!!!! I don't expect you to see things my way. I just hope you can see the huge difference between what folks like me believe and the "materialist compatablism" MF is advocating. carry on peacefifthmonarchyman
April 19, 2015
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SB There are two fairly common meanings for determinism. One is something on the lines of every event, including mental events, has a cause. The other is that everything is in principle predictable. Compatibilism is the insight that both are compatible with free will, making choices. You may disagree but it is not a consequence of the meaning of determinism.Mark Frank
April 19, 2015
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fifthmonarchman
That is what I believe happened in the fall. Mankind misused our freedom to the point that we gave it up. Now we must live with the consequences.
I think I understand more fully now why we differ on this subject. You seem to believe that the fall caused man's free will to be totally extinguished, while I hold that it caused man's will to be wounded and weakened (not extinguished). That would seem to explain why you remain a compatibilist.StephenB
April 19, 2015
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SB @ 154: To Mark's slippery use of language, you might be interesting to know I have added this to our list of dodges:
Materialist Dodge 6: The Humpty Dumpty gambit The dualistic sense of the words you use is so passe. Never mind that that is what those words actually mean when English speakers use them. We materialists get to use words any way that suits us; we’ve been freed from adherence to the linguistic conventions of English speakers. It is not our fault if that obscures our meaning and results in confusion; it is you ignorant fundies’ fault for failing to keep up. Oh, we can also slip back and forth between conventional and esoteric word meaning without telling you. So, when I say “beliefs” are real. That is not inconsistent with saying “beliefs” are an illusion. And when you catch my equivocating between the conventional and esoteric use of words, like that I’ll just accuse you of not being able to accept the findings of science.
Barry Arrington
April 19, 2015
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Of course, that is what determinism means. If he could have chosen differently, then his choice was not determined. Mark Frank
Immaterialist dodge
That is a silly comment. You may not like it, but words mean things. Determinism means determinism, which rules out the prospect of a self-directed life style. It's interesting that you militate against the common meaning of well-established terms while, at the same time, inject undefined words into the discussion. What on earth is an "immaterialist?" Do you mean "Idealist?" I am certainly not a metaphysical idealist. What on earth are you talking about? SB: Compatibilism claims that we have no such volitional power, ruling out the possibility of moral growth, personal responsibility, and legal accountability. As such, it is the worst kind of intellectual fraud.
IOW So let’s talk about how gobsmackingly stupid and dishonest materialists are.
My philosophy has always been this: People are precious and they deserve to be treated with respect and mercy. On the other hand, bad ideas deserve no mercy at all, and I show them no mercy. If you cannot make the distinction, it is your loss.StephenB
April 19, 2015
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StephenB says, We hold him accountable because he misused his free will to practice the kind of vice that would eventually compromise his free will. That is the point. I say, That is what I believe happened in the fall. Mankind misused our freedom to the point that we gave it up. Now we must live with the consequences. you say, Happily, he can, with help and discipline, choose to liberate himself, or unhappily, he can choose to remain in bondage. I say, We can only liberate ourselves with discipline if it is in our nature to do so. Our nature is the very thing that guides our choices. If we have help with our liberation then by definition we do not liberate ourselves you say, compatibilism holds that he could not have chosen to curb the habit before it made a slave of him. I say, compatibilism holds that He could have chosen to curb the habit at any time the problem is he does not want to. Total Freedom means always being able to do what you most want to do. peacefifthmonarchyman
April 19, 2015
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SB: An alcoholic (internal slavery) is just as much of a slave as a prisoner on a chain gang (external slavery). fifthmonarchman
I say, yes but we hold an alcoholic responsible when he kills someone else while driving drunk or neglects his children because of his inebriation.
We hold him accountable because he misused his free will to practice the kind of vice that would eventually compromise his free will. That is the point. He is responsible for what he has become. By contrast, compatibilism holds that he could not have chosen to curb the habit before it made a slave of him. Under those circumstances, he would not be accountable. Compatibilism is totally alien to personal responsibility. Still, his slavery is not absolute or irreversible. Happily, he can, with help and discipline, choose to liberate himself, or unhappily, he can choose to remain in bondage. According to compatibilism, he does not have the power to make these kinds of choices. That is why it is so dreadfully wrong.StephenB
April 19, 2015
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Mark Frank, The problem here is with the labels you wish to apply and what you are applying them to. When you say a person "can choose" differently, you cannot, under logically-consistant materialism, mean that in a top-down prescriptive sense. What you must mean is that the ongoing lawful, probabilistic and non-teleological interactions of matter and energy (bottom-up) could have resulted in that person thinking and doing something other than what actually occurred. In a non-deterministic materialist universe, you are correct - something else could have happened. The question, though, is if it makes any sense, and if it is reasonable, to label what happened a free will choice. Do you really think that most jurors that judge the responsibility of a defendant are thinking in materialist terms? Of course not. Do you really think that most people who refer to a free will choice in common conversation use the term like a materialist means it? Certainly not. Do you think that the framers of law who use the terms "personal reasponsiblity" and "free will" intended those terms to be undertood in their materialist sense? Considering that most law is founded on foundations originally set up by theists, no, I don't think so. So what does it mean for you to argue that, from a courtroom-legal perspective, "free will choice" means something that is compatible with determinism? Are you unwilling to acknowledge that the materialist and/or determinist view is most certainly not what most people mean, nor what the justice system means, when they refer to "free will" and "choice"? Are you not willing to acknowledge that if a long-lasting culture of logically-consistent materialists invented a judicial system, the whole concept of "justice" and "responsibility" and how to deal with offenders would be entirely different both conceptually and in practice? What you are arguing here seems to be that you can take what is the very root concept (personal free-will responsibility) of our entire system of justice and commonly-understood morality, swap it out with something that means exactly the opposite of what it means to virtually everyone who established and operates that legal system, and that it is entirely acceptable for you to do so and then insist that yes, personal free-will responsibility exists under materialism, too. No, Mark, there is no such thing as personal free-will responsibility under materialism; you and other campatibilists are simply slapping the term on something entirely different and then saying that it also exists under materialism. It would be like taking the term "football player", applying it to a guy who stands on a big ball and plays the violin, then saying "this guy is a better football player than Peyton Manning". This goes back to what I said in another thread. Under materialism, humans are dice are exactly the same in terms of what causes their behavior; happenstance interactions of matter and energy (acting according to natural law and mechanical probability). The outcome of what the human thought and did, and the outcome of a roll of dice, could have been different. You seem to think that just because those selfsame happenstance physical forces happened to also generate corresponding thoughts and sensations that the human was making a top down, prescriptive free-will choice, it is the same as the human actually having a free will, prescriptive, top down choice, because you think it is fair to call the illusory sensation of a thing the thing itself. Under materialism, "actually having" means "the illusory sensation of actually having". That's not what it means to most people and is certainly not the concept our system of justice is built on. Sure, you can talk to the rolling dice if you want. Tell them they should land on a 7. But, if you know they will land on whatever they land on due to how matter and energy interact according to natural law and mechanical probability anyway, then talking to them as if they can understand you and make themselves land on 7 because you’ve convinced them they ought to, is insane. And, that’s what you’re doing here, and what all materialists who deny top-down, prescriptive control are necessarily doing. They’re telling dice (humans) what number they should land on and you are expecting them to somehow make themselves do so, even while you agree that have no capacity to do so, that if they happen to land on that 7 it is purely becuase of law and probability, even if the dice feels like it was their top-down, prescriptive free-will choice. When you roll dice, do you hold the dice responsible for the outcomes? If the happenstance interactions of matter and energy happened to make the dice capable of experiencing a sensation that they were capable of top-down, prescriptive choice about what number was going to show when they finished rolling, and if you knew that sensation was illusory and that the dice would land however law and probability dictated, would you then hold the dice responsible for the outcome? Certainly not! You'd hold non-teleological physics and blind, mechanical probability responsible, regardless of the protestations and sensations of the dice, because you know the dice are operating out of the mistaken belief that their illusory sensations refer to something that doesn't exist. And yet here you are ... attempting to talk to dice, as we roll, into landing on certain numbers, as if we have some capacity to override law and probability and make ourselves land how we think we ought. You and eigenstate are here insisting that the illusion of X is the only form of X that actually exists, but both the case you are making and your expectation of our capacity to understand, agree and implement oughts derived from your case entirely depends on X actually existing. If you actually believed and acted as if there was only the illusion of top-down, prescriptive free-will control, and actually understood that we are all only deluded dice rolling and landing however physics and probability decreed, you certainly wouldn't bother yourselves trying to talk dice into landing on the particular numbers you prefer. Unless, of course, you're insane.William J Murray
April 19, 2015
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StephenB say, An alcoholic (internal slavery) is just as much of a slave as a prisoner on a chain gang (external slavery). I say, yes but we hold an alcoholic responsible when he kills someone else while driving drunk or neglects his children because of his inebriation. His internal slavery is compatible with him being responsible for his own actions. That is what traditional compatiblism means. peacefifthmonarchyman
April 19, 2015
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MF I think in this discussion it would be good to separate the world into two camps materialists and everyone else. The materialist believes that only matter truly exists and everyone else disagrees. The non-materialist doesn't agree on much except that materialism is nuts. peacefifthmonarchyman
April 19, 2015
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#146 WJM fair enough - dualist (or maybe non-materialist so allow for those who think that are more than two?) would be much betterMark Frank
April 19, 2015
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StephenB says, When a man murders, he is militating against his true nature I say, You have a much higher view of natural "postlapsarian" human nature than I do. quote: as it is written: "None is righteous, no, not one; no one understands; no one seeks for God. All have turned aside; together they have become worthless; no one does good, not even one." "Their throat is an open grave; they use their tongues to deceive." "The venom of asps is under their lips." "Their mouth is full of curses and bitterness." "Their feet are swift to shed blood; in their paths are ruin and misery, and the way of peace they have not known." "There is no fear of God before their eyes." (Rom 3:10-18) end quote: you say, An alcoholic (internal slavery) is just as much of a slave as a prisoner on a chain gang (external slavery). I say, I completely agree that the will of the natural man is in internal bondage to sin. That is the big problem that Jesus came to fix. quote: Jesus answered them, "Truly, truly, I say to you, everyone who practices sin is a slave to sin...........So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed. (Joh 8:34-36) and We know that our old self was crucified with him in order that the body of sin might be brought to nothing, so that we would no longer be enslaved to sin. (Rom 6:6) and They promise them freedom, but they themselves are slaves of corruption. For whatever overcomes a person, to that he is enslaved. (2Pe 2:19) end quote: I hope that is sufficient to explain the "natural" state of humanity sans Christ. The Christian is no longer a slave to sin but he is still not able to due something that is contrary to his new nature anymore than a sheep is free to live his life as a carnivore. quote: Whoever makes a practice of sinning is of the devil, for the devil has been sinning from the beginning. The reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the works of the devil. No one born of God makes a practice of sinning, for God's seed abides in him, and he cannot keep on sinning because he has been born of God. (1Jn 3:8-9) end quote: end of sermon ;-) peacefifthmonarchyman
April 19, 2015
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Mark Frank: I doubt anyone here is an immaterialist, which denies the existence of a material world. Most here are more likely dualists, believing that a non-material spiritual world exists in addition to the material world.William J Murray
April 19, 2015
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SB This is the immaterialist dodge in action.
Of course that is what determinism means. If he could have chosen differently, then his choice was not determined. (my arguments) All that is irrelevant to the question of free will, by which the moral agent can resist the temptation to murder and choose the path of self control.
IOW. I am obviously right therefore there is no point in discussing the arguments.
Compatibilism claims that we have no such volitional power, ruling out the possibility of moral growth, personal responsibility, and legal accountability. As such, it is the worst kind of intellectual fraud.
IOW So let’s talk about how gobsmackingly stupid and dishonest materialists are.Mark Frank
April 19, 2015
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fifthmonarchymanAp
Again I won’t speak to what MF believes but according to traditional Compatibilism there is nothing preventing the murderer from resisting temptation except his own nature.
Yes, of course, and as you seem to perceive, this is dreadfully wrong. It is the same as saying that it is man's nature not to have a free will. There are two kinds of freedom, and reciprocally, two kinds of slavery. First, there is a freedom from, which is the absence of external oppression, and there is a freedom to, which is the ability to become something or accomplish something, which involves the absence of internal moral barriers. I am free to play the piano, for example, only if no one stops me from the outside (some sort of restraint) and if I don't stop myself from the inside (a vice such as laziness). Accordingly, one can be a slave in two ways--a political slave, or a moral slave. An alcoholic (internal slavery) is just as much of a slave as a prisoner on a chain gang (external slavery).
But he will not resist because to do so would be against his nature.
So says the compatibilist. But, as you must know, this is nonsense. As a rational being with an intellect (to know right from wrong) and free will (to choose right from wrong), it is his nature to make good moral choices and abstain from bad moral choices. If he doesn't have that power, then his nature is more animal than human.
When he murders he is being true to who he really is
Again, this is what the compatibilist is saying. However, as you seem to understand, the compatibilist is dead wrong. The purpose of the intellect is to know truth and distinguish it from error; the purpose of the will is to love the right things and choose the good. When a man murders, he is militating against his true nature, which is to use his intelligence (it provides the moral target) and his will (it shoots the arrow). If he cannot shoot the arrow, that is, if his will cannot follow the counsel of the intellect, then his will is not free and his intellect serves no moral purpose--he is a slave.StephenB
April 18, 2015
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StephenB says, All that is irrelevant to the question of free will, by which the moral agent can resist the temptation to murder and choose the path of self control. I say, Again I won't speak to what MF believes but according to traditional Compatibilism there is nothing preventing the murderer from resisting temptation except his own nature. But he will not resist because to do so would be against his nature. When he murders he is being true to who he really is I hope that makes sense peacefifthmonarchyman
April 18, 2015
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Mark Frank
You are assuming that determinism means he could not have chosen differently.
Of course that is what determinism means. If he could have chosen differently, then his choice was not determined.
Can” is a modal verb. It means it is possible that X could have done differently. Any modal verb is relative to some constraint (which may be explicit, but is more often implicit) – the constraint can vary from the laws of logic (logically possible), through laws of nature (possible according to Newton’s laws of motion) through to specific antecedent events (possible given the position of the gun). Determinism is quite compatible with many different possibilities depending on the constraint Added to which compatibilism includes compatibility with truly random events which allow for something being possible under all circumstances.
All that is irrelevant to the question of free will, by which the moral agent can resist the temptation to murder and choose the path of self control. Compatibilism claims that we have no such volitional power, ruling out the possibility of moral growth, personal responsibility, and legal accountability. As such, it is the worst kind of intellectual fraud.StephenB
April 18, 2015
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#138 SB
Well, Mark, the criminal justice system, which includes judges, prosecutors, and juries made up of ordinary people, disagrees with you. It operates on the assumption that the murderer and the thief could have chosen not to murder or steal.
You are assuming that determinism means he could not have chosen differently. "Can" is a modal verb. It means it is possible that X could have done differently. Any modal verb is relative to some constraint (which may be explicit, but is more often implicit) - the constraint can vary from the laws of logic (logically possible), through laws of nature (possible according to Newton's laws of motion) through to specific antecedent events (possible given the position of the gun). Determinism is quite compatible with many different possibilities depending on the constraint. Added to which compatibilism includes compatibility with truly random events which allow for something being possible under all circumstances.Mark Frank
April 18, 2015
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StephenB It operates on the assumption that the murderer and the thief could have chosen not to murder or steal. I suspect that the CJ system may have some kind of preliminary test to weed out compatibilists. I say, I don't want to wade in here except perhaps to clear up some confusion. Not only have materialists hijacked terms like good and evil but apparently here they are also equivocating on the definition of Compatabilism. We need to be perfectly clear about what it means to be "free to choose". According to traditional compatibilists a person is free if he is under no "outside" compulsion . A thief might very well be compelled to steal but the compulsion comes from his own nature not from anything outside himself. A key verse in this regard is Jeremiah 13:23 quote: Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots? Then also you can do good who are accustomed to do evil. (Jer 13:23) end quote: The person who is "accustomed" to do evil can not do good but that does not mean he is innocent. On the contrary that is how we know he is guilty. The traditional compatibilist believes that only if a person acts according to his nature are his acts free. In fact that is the definition of freedom. In this traditional understanding a person's nature is tied up with who he is so punishment for crime committed according to nature is not unjust. It seems as if the system of belief that MF is advocating holds that an person's nature can be reduced to matter in motion. I have no idea how matter in motion can be held responsible for anything. It's not libertarian freedom that is the issue but how the materialist accounts for the self. peacefifthmonarchyman
April 18, 2015
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I don't think you need free will to rationalize a criminal justice system. If people are held responsible for their actions even if they are not "responsible" for them you might get the same result: deterrence, protect society from offenders, rehabilitation. It might not be "fair" in some sense if you punish people who are not responsible for their actions, but it might be effective and that would be the reason to have such a system.Jim Smith
April 18, 2015
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Mark Frank
1) Does Libertarian free will correspond to our day to day experience of free will? 2) Is Libertarian free will a coherent concept? My answer to both is no.
Well, Mark, the criminal justice system, which includes judges, prosecutors, and juries made up of ordinary people, disagrees with you. It operates on the assumption that the murderer and the thief could have chosen not to murder or steal. Indeed, I suspect that the CJ system may have some kind of preliminary test to weed out compatibilists. If they don't, they should.StephenB
April 18, 2015
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SEVERSKY: You wrote: "there is still a very difficult question for Christians, which is that an omniscient God with demonstrated foreknowledge of our future itself undermines the possibility of free will." No, it does not. But I am not going to waste my time explaining in detail why, given the contemptuous way you have ignored my last few responses to you. Why should I put in time to explain something that I don't know for sure you will even read, let alone respond to?Timaeus
April 18, 2015
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Nightlight @ 10
Just as conventional computer programs and algorithms can be ranked by functionality, speed, memory consumption,… etc, so can be the programs and algorithms, including those implementing ‘moral judgment’ functionality, running in the neural networks formed by human neurons. Hence, it all comes down to the definition of the attribute “objectively superior” i.e. the utility function one chooses for the ranking. But once you decide on what utility function to use, [and then determine the standards by which you will make that judgment], there is no problem finding some of ethical programs and algorithms “objectively superior” to others.
So who gets to choose the objective standard by which we measure the functionality of moral judgments? Majority rule? Government? Might makes right? Each to his own? Why is functionality THE standard by which we should evaluate all moral judgments? In the end, don't you still have the same problem?tjguy
April 17, 2015
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@WJM
I’m not complaining that it is an illusion; I’m pointing it out for those in the audience that want their cake and think they can eat the illusion. They cannot. If they are fine with admitting they are behaving delusionally, I’m fine with leaving the argument there. I’m fine with any argument where my opponent wishes to end it by saying “Yes, I’m delusional. So what? You are, too! So is everyone else!”
Above you said in your view a delusion was an illusion that one knows is an illusion, but proceeds as if its not. What's an example of this illusion that you or I or someone else here is understanding to be an illusion, but proceeding as if it's not? My example from the other thread was the "dualist intuition". I can understand the intuition, but insofar as it is an actual intuition, I understand it to illusory, and cannot be reconciled with the world around us. So I understand that to be illusory, but I then also treat it that way, as an intuition I reject.eigenstate
April 17, 2015
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