Do you believe in Determinism?

  • Yes, I believe in it.

    Votes: 25 61.0%
  • No, I don't believe in it.

    Votes: 16 39.0%

  • Total voters
    41
PlannedforPeru

PlannedforPeru

SaSu. Lurker
Sep 21, 2024
76
For those who don't know, Determinism is the philosophical view that all events in the universe, including human decisions and actions, are causally inevitable.

As the title says, do you believe in it and to what degree? I'm excluding a maybe, unsure, or in the middle answer because I've seen a lot of people choose that option and would suspect no different here. If you do want to expand on the nuance or your own beliefs, I'd love to see discussion of it in a reply.

Posted in the suicide discussion, as I want to see the results of this specific demographic.
 
C

CantDoIt

Wizard
Jul 18, 2024
691
Kind of ? When I look back at my life and the poor decisions that led me to where I am today, I don't feel totally "in control." I know I made those decisions, but I was also put in a position in which those things would easily happen to me and was given biology / a brain in which those things would happen and those decisions would be made. If I had the ability to go back in time and change those decisions I would, but at the time those were just things I "did."

Here is the crazy part:
When I hear about NDEs, they say we choose our lives ahead of time. They say there is free will but people also choose lives to play a role. So free will is somewhat limited if you believe in this sort of thing, which I'm not sure if I do. If you choose a life in which you know you may have difficulty than free will is limited and the life may have been chosen to experience certain adversity. Maybe your choices could have been different but you were set up to easily make the wrong ones in order to learn a lesson. This second part is purely supernatural/assuming people with near death experiences are correct.
 
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C

cosmic-realism

Member
Sep 7, 2024
34
Hinduism itself is all about determinism.Everything is pre-planned.You have no power.You are God's puppet.
You're misery is your past life karma and all that.To be honest,that just makes people complacent.Self-pity overrides the need for justice.


I didn't even ask to be a puppet.
 
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Gustav Hartmann

Gustav Hartmann

Wizard
Aug 28, 2021
650
I believe in causlity and that there are laws of nature. I use the word believe in terms of "working hypothesis". Even if there is pure coincidence in the quantum world, there could not be a free will. I even daubt, that free will is the result of emergence. My ideas and stimuli come out of the blue, or the unconscious, as it is called today. But though I believe that free will and determinism is an illusion I act as if I had a free will, otherwise it is impossible to live.
 
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angelicat

angelicat

Member
Oct 29, 2024
6
I believe that theoretically everything is determined but in practice it's not. For example the rolling of a dice, in theory you could take the angle it was thrown from and other outside factors like the wind or table it lands on and calculate those factors in order to know what side it lands on, before it lands on any side. But in practice you cannot calculate all that in seconds.
Also if you implemented determinism in the real world it would cause a lot of problems, for example murderes or robbers could defend themselves that they were determined to do that due to the laws of nature and cannot be held accountable for the crimes they committed.
 
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PlannedforPeru

PlannedforPeru

SaSu. Lurker
Sep 21, 2024
76
I believe that theoretically everything is determined but in practice it's not. For example the rolling of a dice, in theory you could take the angle it was thrown from and other outside factors like the wind or table it lands on and calculate those factors in order to know what side it lands on, before it lands on any side. But in practice you cannot calculate all that in seconds.
Also if you implemented determinism in the real world it would cause a lot of problems, for example murderes or robbers could defend themselves that they were determined to do that due to the laws of nature and cannot be held accountable for the crimes they committed.
I get what you mean on a thematic level in your response, but don't you think that there is a scenario in which determinism can be acknowledged without it being weaponized as an excuse to justify bad behaviors (if it isn't already)? I think to some extent it's already showcased in insanity pleas.

Regardless of the behavior being a result of truly independent choice or an unfortunate combination of genetic predisposition and environmental conditions that allowed that to occur, the being is not absolved from necessary steps taken to ensure public safety; Either way, it could be framed as reflection time-out for the free-willed mind or enough time in different conditions to prevent a similar occurrence in the future to the determined body.

I don't mean to pick apart your response or anything, I just found it interesting and was curious about your thoughts.
 
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MatrixPrisoner

MatrixPrisoner

Enlightened
Jul 8, 2023
1,532
All I believe in is random arrangement of atoms. And we all unfortunately are composed of a bad arrangement of low-quality atoms.
 
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U

Unspoken7612

Specialist
Jul 14, 2024
340
I believe both in determinism and free will. I was recently convinced of the compatibilist position.
 
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deadstillwalking

deadstillwalking

floating away from everyone
Apr 23, 2024
8
I believe both in determinism and free will. I was recently convinced of the compatibilist position.
Hey, could you explain compatibilism and why you believe it? Because if I remember correctly, even Sapolsky stated in his book that compatibilism is bs
I'm a hard determinist since my early teens, I just didn't know it was an actual philosophy cuz until I turned 17 I had THE WHOLE concept of determinism in my head. I grew up as a Christian but as soon as I started asking myself deterministic questions my faith weakened drastically till it was completely destroyed when I learned about determinism (before that happened I thought I'd been just delusional so finding out that plenty of other people think the same put the nail on the coffin). I believe that we are 100% controlled by outside forces and that there is no room for free will. Do I believe that criminals should be held accountable for their crimes? Yes. I don't see them being sentenced as a form of "punishment" but more like a lesson, after all prison time serves as a rehabilitation that gives you space to reflect on your actions. Either way, if someone commits a crime it means that their guilt or fear of judgement were overshadowed by other motives. So our job would be to prevent that from happening by strengthening the motives NOT to commit crimes again, which of course would take form of a punishment. That's the way it is, the world is cruel. But fear not, humanity is far from ready to accept the absence of free will so people will still be judged and hated over decisions they were forced to make, yikes. I hope I make sense cuz it's night-time and I'm tired af so I'm not aware of anything that sounds straight up dogshit but I hope I unlocked a new point of view for you.
 
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H

Hvergelmir

Student
May 5, 2024
178
Hey, could you explain compatibilism and why you believe it? Because if I remember correctly, even Sapolsky stated in his book that compatibilism is bs
To me determinism and free will are on completely different abstraction levels.

Free will is a high level concept, while determinism is about cause and effect, energy and matter.
I believe that what we perceive as free will is a result of determinism. I still think "free will" is a good high level abstraction, helping us make sense of our surrounding.

Let's assume that determinism is false, though. Let's assume that the universe is governed by quantum level uncertainty principles: true randomness.
Does free will exist then? Or is it just randomness?

When you pitch determinism against free will, you're really asking if free will is a fundamental building block of the universe.
To me free will is very real, even if it's fuzzy and abstract, and governed by deeper mechanics (deterministic or otherwise).
 
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Unspoken7612

Specialist
Jul 14, 2024
340
Hey, could you explain compatibilism and why you believe it?
I think the other responder has made the case I would fairly convincingly. Our decisions are the result of natural processes, but it nonetheless remains that we have a degree of will. We make decisions. Sure, we might have always made the same decision, but it is nonetheless a decision.

Now, one important thing to bear in mind is that I am an atheist. I recognise that determinism, even a compatibilist determinism, is difficult to reconcile with an omnibenevolent, omnipotent, omniscient creator god who knows what we will do before creating us but still punishes us for our actions. But remove the deity with foreknowledge and the nature of will looks different to me.
 
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eeah

eeah

waste
Sep 11, 2024
64
i dont know if the universe is deterministic but either way i dont believe in free will. its either deterministic or has some degree of randomness but either way i dont think people have free will
 
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Darkover

Darkover

Angelic
Jul 29, 2021
4,567
All I believe in is random arrangement of atoms. And we all unfortunately are composed of a bad arrangement of low-quality atoms.
really there should be away of making atoms belong to other atoms so they never break apart this way teeth would never decay making atoms belong to an intelligent machine so they never break down what ever created the universe did a poor job really
 
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cohomology

cohomology

Member
Oct 5, 2024
40
I am not a determinist for basically the same reason why I'm not religious. I just think determinism is a very strong almost religious claim with very little proof for it.
 
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angelicat

angelicat

Member
Oct 29, 2024
6
Of course it can be acknowledged without it being weaponized, as you've said in insanity please as an example. What i meant is that this "excuse" should not get over used and is actually being used by people who commit these crimes due to their unfortunate past which lead them to this. But not everyone commits crimes due to what happened to them, most people just do it because we are human beings who only do stuff for our own personal gain and nothing else.
We sadly live in a selfish world where this would be over used by those who don't deserve it and people who actually suffer from illnesses that lead them to this would be overlooked.
I hope I understood your response correctly and that you get what I mean (English isn't my first language, so i sometimes have difficulty understanding stuff and expressing myself). Also don't worry about picking apart my response, if i would be that sensitive to other people commenting about my thoughts I wouldn't comment on here anyway :)
I get what you mean on a thematic level in your response, but don't you think that there is a scenario in which determinism can be acknowledged without it being weaponized as an excuse to justify bad behaviors (if it isn't already)? I think to some extent it's already showcased in insanity pleas.

Regardless of the behavior being a result of truly independent choice or an unfortunate combination of genetic predisposition and environmental conditions that allowed that to occur, the being is not absolved from necessary steps taken to ensure public safety; Either way, it could be framed as reflection time-out for the free-willed mind or enough time in different conditions to prevent a similar occurrence in the future to the determined body.

I don't mean to pick apart your response or anything, I just found it interesting and was curious about your thoughts.
 
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ZeroM24

ZeroM24

Member
Oct 31, 2024
30
I think that humanity is definetely determined to destroy each other in every way possible. And that will never change.
 
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