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01-01-2007
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#1 (permalink)
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Why Determinism could never be disproven or shown to be unlikely
Philosophy teaches us to deal with human reasoning itself and since all human endeavors use human reasoning to achieve their goals, philosophy allows us to come to universal conclusions that hold true regardless of the circumstances or what discipline they are applied to.
Here I will show that it is impossible to disprove determinism or reduce the likelihood that it is true.
The lesson learned from skepticism
Here is a statement about what philosophy has taught us regarding skepticism, or the limits of induction or lack of human knowledge or whichever name you want to use for it.
For every belief, there are infinite models of the universe that disprove said belief and are not mutually exclusive with the experiences that led the person in question to form said belief.
Each of these models are equally likely to be true as they are to be untrue, since by their very nature they explain how what you saw can be true and your beliefs still wrong.
Applied to determinism
With this in mind, we can see that any potential disproof of determinism can be ruled out by categorizing it as a simple lack of information. One need not be a quantum physicist in order to do this.
Now on the other hand we might try to say that the only reason we believe determinsim to be true is because the world we experience everyday (the macro world) seems to be deterministic and we have never been given a reason to doubt it. Then we could say that these experiences might not represent the quantum world.
Well it is not hard to show that many kinds of non deterministic worlds do not make any kind of sense, or at least, they seem to contradict the idea that "A=A" therefore making deductive reasoning impossible and since our consiousnesses are dependent on this being true it is useless to try and speculate on the nature of such an enviornment, if it ever could or did exist.
Abnormal Time
On the other hand, it could be that a certain definition of determinism could be used that depends on time behaving a certain way and it could be claimed that this kind of determinism fails when time fails to behave in that manner. IE if you could go back in time and effect the outcome of past events. However one could simply respond that this is still determinism, just a much more complicated kind of determinism.
Everything that happens still follows a set of rules, and can be calculated from start to finish with enough processing power using an objective time line that seperates a point in a subjective timeline into a point before and a point after it was influenced by future events in order to produce an usual effect.
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01-01-2007
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#2 (permalink)
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Re: Why Determinism could never be disproven or shown to be unlikely
First I'd like to know what relevance determinism has. In my opinion, it's a quasi-religious cop-out, an attempt to subvert acceptance of inevitable ignorance and short comings in human potential to understand.
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01-01-2007
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#3 (permalink)
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Explaining
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Re: Why Determinism could never be disproven or shown to be unlikely
I believe you are referring to lack of free will correct?
The pilgrims who founded the US were said to follow a belief set that free will did not exist, yet at the same time that people were responsible for their actions.
The idea behind such beliefs is similar to that of private ownership of land. True, as the native americans say, noone really owns the land and is certainly not resonsible for it's creation etc. However taking ownership of the land causes people to take better care of it, thus making private ownership a means to an end and only in this way is it justified.
Similarly, a person's actions can be a product of their past experiences and yet they still are able to "take ownership" of their behavior and alter it to best adapt to their surroundings. Doing so is a product of the person realizing that it is the best way to achieve their goals.
Additionally punishing people for failing to behave in a certain manner can be justified as a means to an end even though the person truly "Didn't know". The only way the person can know is by being punished...
For example spanking a child for stealing crayons may be percieved as random punishment initially by the child, but hopefully once he learns that any time he steals from others he will be punished he will no longer steal from others. This is the model nature uses, for if no parent or teacher intervened the child from which the crayon was stolen would which would teach the child the same lesson.
The lesson to be learned from all this is that if you are in a position of power over others such as law enforcement or law in general then the best way to handle your job so as not to encourage crime is to treat people like you are only using force against them because you have to given the consequences of not. Verbal abuse is fallacious and self centered on the part of people in law enforcement/ law because they are wholly ignorant of the criminals past experiences.
Last edited by Kriminal99; 01-01-2007 at 08:50 AM..
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01-01-2007
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#4 (permalink)
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Re: Why Determinism could never be disproven or shown to be unlikely
I feel as if you bring this up again and again, and don't bother educating yourself in between. I highly recommend reading Bell's proofs, reading about Aspects experimental work, etc.
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Originally Posted by Kriminal99
For every belief, there are infinite models of the universe that disprove said belief and are not mutually exclusive with the experiences that led the person in question to form said belief.
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But often every one of these "infinite" models might share common features. Consider the data of an Aspect type experiment. There are no local causal "universes" that can consistantly explain these experiments.
With enough DIFFERENT experiments/experimental data, the subset of allowable universes that explain this belief gets smaller. It could very well be possible that there is only one consistant way of explaining the universe(by which I mean the totality of possible experiments), no one has proven otherwise to my knowledge.
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With this in mind, we can see that any potential disproof of determinism can be ruled out by categorizing it as a simple lack of information. One need not be a quantum physicist in order to do this.
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This is not true. Bell has shown that there is no completely deterministic model that can explain the aspect experiment. Bell showed this using deductive reasoning.
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Well it is not hard to show that many kinds of non deterministic worlds do not make any kind of sense, or at least, they seem to contradict the idea that "A=A" therefore making deductive reasoning impossible and since our consiousnesses are dependent on this being true it is useless to try and speculate on the nature of such an enviornment, if it ever could or did exist.
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What of the kinds of non-deterministic worlds that DO allow for deductive reasoning? There are many. This is a straw-man type argument.
-Will
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01-14-2007
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#5 (permalink)
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Re: Why Determinism could never be disproven or shown to be unlikely
Recently, on a different board, a determinist poster remarked that upon learning about probabilistic effects in quantum theory, he was "shocked" and found this "unimaginable". This isn't very far removed from the creationist position that "the universe is too wonderful to be natural, there must be a god", both are cases of denial and come under "appeal to incredulity". However, the determinist has a degree of scientific respectability, as appeal to so called physical laws can be evoked. I have concluded that, in at least some cases, determinism is espoused as a comforting mechanism and functions as an atheistic parallel to the motivations, of some, to adopt a religion.
Another point, in line with this thread's title, determinism cant easily be proven false, as the definition allows the follower to simply say that the universe in state A, being followed by the universe in state B, is determinism. However, as with religion, this is an attempt to switch the burden of proof, the experience, and even the existence, of our individual consciousnesses is a direct contradiction of strong determinism, and as such, can be awarded primacy by any theory of truth.
I'm interested to know what others feel are the motivations for adopting a determinist stance(?)
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01-14-2007
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#6 (permalink)
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Explaining
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Re: Why Determinism could never be disproven or shown to be unlikely
The whole quantum mechanics thing just boils down to a lack of comprehension of skepticism. IE just failure to be able to imagine alternate explanations for what you see.
Some of these alternate explanations are investigated by the community at large but not all of them. When you are dealing with a situation that involves things totally different than what you are used to dealing with, everything becomes an unfounded assumption. IE you are likely attributing properties to quantum particles based on your experiences with the macro world without recognizing that you are doing it.
The whole idea that you can recognize all the assumptions you are making is fallacious in any discipline. These assumptions infact always number in the infinite. The only defense against this is that if any of these infinite assumptions were to fail, hopefully you would see it's effects somehow. For instance if a ball were to have a mass that changed during the course of an experiment.
But when you are dealing with something like QM, you have very little ability to observe what is going on. There isn't enough input to allow you to identify when something you assumed was the case about the particles isn't true. In the macro world if something like a ball of changing mass were to occur, it might take centuries for someone to recognize what was going on. And it would be possible because we live in the macro world and make observations about all the consequences of eveything that happens. In the world of particles, our information is a negligable fraction of that which we have in the macro world.
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Originally Posted by ughaibu
Recently, on a different board, a determinist poster remarked that upon learning about probabilistic effects in quantum theory, he was "shocked" and found this "unimaginable". This isn't very far removed from the creationist position that "the universe is too wonderful to be natural, there must be a god", both are cases of denial and come under "appeal to incredulity". However, the determinist has a degree of scientific respectability, as appeal to so called physical laws can be evoked. I have concluded that, in at least some cases, determinism is espoused as a comforting mechanism and functions as an atheistic parallel to the motivations, of some, to adopt a religion.
Another point, in line with this thread's title, determinism cant easily be proven false, as the definition allows the follower to simply say that the universe in state A, being followed by the universe in state B, is determinism. However, as with religion, this is an attempt to switch the burden of proof, the experience, and even the existence, of our individual consciousnesses is a direct contradiction of strong determinism, and as such, can be awarded primacy by any theory of truth.
I'm interested to know what others feel are the motivations for adopting a determinist stance(?)
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I could just as easily refer to an imaginary person who did not understand the concept of skpeticism/limits of induction and say they were in denial that it could not be proven that determinism did not exist and how blind faith in science was similar to creationism. However this is not an actual argument.
I think at the very best, people attempting to claim determinism is false are using a different definition of determinism than those defending it are.
For instance one definition says its the belief that all events have a cause. While another might refer to prior events being causes for events. The latter is an example of one that might be more likely to be disproved, but does not represent what true determinists have an attachment to.
IE time could be reversed or could go back and forth or future events could effect past events etc and all still be within the limits allowed by a true determinist. For reverse time, determinism would refer to the bidirectional relationship between events. For future events effecting past events, to use a metaphor imagine a time rope with a not in it, and to see the real chain of events one would simply untie the knot to see the true chain of events. IE you would create a different kind of timeline where it shows at what point a future event effected a past event and what happened after.
Until these possibilities are dealt with, there is little evidence against true determinism.
Last edited by Kriminal99; 01-14-2007 at 04:05 AM..
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01-14-2007
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#7 (permalink)
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Re: Why Determinism could never be disproven or shown to be unlikely
By "true determinism", do you mean 'strong determinism'?
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01-14-2007
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#8 (permalink)
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Explaining
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Re: Why Determinism could never be disproven or shown to be unlikely
By true determinism, I mean what it is that people think of when they say that determinism cannot be disproven. I also mean determinism which does not depend on time behaving in a certain manner, but rather only depends on events having causes.
What is strong determinism?
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01-14-2007
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#9 (permalink)
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Re: Why Determinism could never be disproven or shown to be unlikely
Your explanation doesn't help me understand your definition.
Strong determinism holds that everything in the universe is connected and in reaction, thus the entire past and future of everything, including your thoughts, was/is inevitable.
Here's a short introductory overview of determinism: Causal Determinism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
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01-14-2007
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#10 (permalink)
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Understanding
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Re: Why Determinism could never be disproven or shown to be unlikely
Determinism comes in many shades: theological, economic, sociological, biological/genetic, and cosmological. Personally, I am a hard determinist of the sociological and biological persuasion. Human behavior is controlled by genes and environmental influences. In my world view free will and determinism are mutually exclusive making compatibilism meaningless. What evidence is there for this? There are thousands of sociological and biological experiments that point to causal relationships between sociological and biological influences and the resulting human behavior.
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"Those who forget to remember the past are condemned to repeat it", George Santayana
Last edited by Freddy; 01-14-2007 at 01:16 PM..
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