literally adverb exactly, really, closely, actually, simply, plainly, truly, precisely, strictly, faithfully, to the letter, verbatim, word for word
The word 'volk' translates literally as 'folk'.
Good. You looked it up, and gave us the thesaurus list of
synonyms.
The Oxford English Dictionary
defines literally this way:
I. In a literal manner or sense.
1.a. In a literal, exact, or actual sense; not figuratively, allegorically, etc.
Literally is the opposite of figuratively.
The Oxford English Dictionary
defines figuratively this way:
In a figurative manner.
1. In or by means of a figure or emblem.
2. By or as a figure of speech; metaphorically.
One small complication in using these two words correctly is that the words,
literally,
really, and
actually are sometimes misused as
intensifiers when making a figurative statement. From the American Heritage Dictionary in your
original citing:
Usage Note: For more than a hundred years, critics have remarked on the incoherence of using literally in a way that suggests the exact opposite of its primary sense of "in a manner that accords with the literal sense of the words." In 1926, for example, H.W. Fowler deplored the example "The 300,000 Unionists ... will be literally thrown to the wolves."
Obviously, the 300,000 soldiers will not be literally "thrown to the wolves". They may be abandoned on the field without backup or support, such that it is AS IF they were "thrown to the wolves". But that is
literally a
figurative statement.
When I use the word "literally", I am referring to a correct statement as to what is actually going on in the real world, as a matter of objective fact.
And when I complain about someone speaking "figuratively", I am criticizing the statement for being an
inaccurate and
false depiction of what is actually happening in the real world.
The criteria for determining whether a statement is literal or figurative is to compare it to empirical reality. Are the 300,000 soldiers being actually thrown to the wolves? No. So the statement is figurative, not literal.
And I hope that clears up the distinction between figurative and literal. It is an important distinction, because it has to do with what is
true and what is
not true.
In debates about determinism we see many figurative statements. For example, consider the statement: "If my choice is already determined then it is as if I never made the choice at all". But is it literally true that you never made the choice? No. You actually made a choice. That is an empirical fact. And it was also causally necessary that you would be actually making that specific choice. That too would be an empirical fact. And there is never any contradiction between two empirical facts (all empirical facts are compatible).
As there are no alternative actions within a determined system, there are no two things that a person can do.
Figurative or literal? Figurative, because whenever choosing happens (and it empirically does happen), there will always be at least two distinct things that the person
can do. The person literally
can choose one and the person literally
can choose the other. This is a logical requirement of the choosing operation. It is built into the mechanism of decision-making.
Freedom of choice is an illusion.
Figurative or literal? Figurative, again.
Freedom of choice is literally the ability to choose from multiple options the single thing that we will do, while we are free of coercion and undue influence. Coercion and undue influence are real events in the real world. And we can actually be either free of them or we can actually be subjected to them. In matters of legal responsibility, there will be case law precedents, expert testimony, and objective evidence of these facts.
There may be different actions, multiple actions, but each and every action is determined, not chosen.
Figurative or literal? This time we get a mixture!
Each and every action is certainly determined by some actual object and some actual event.
But choosing happens to be an actual event that is actually performed by us.
So, we cannot conclude that all determined events are "not chosen", because some determined events are literally chosen.
If it is determined that you turn left, that is your only possible action. Turning right was never a possibility for you.
Figuratively or literally? That depends entirely on what is the
determining cause.
For example, if you are in a building, walking down a hallway on the right side of the building, and it intersects with a hallway that requires you to turn left, then that is certainly your only possible action.
But if you're in the same building with a central hallway, that intersects halls on both the left and right, then it would be equally possible for you to turn left or right.
And you having those two possibilities would be causally necessary from any prior point in time.
That, by the given and agreed upon definition, is how determinism works.
But two things can't happen.
No, two things
won't happen, but any number of things
can happen.
What
will happen is
constrained by what
can happen, because if it cannot happen, then it will not happen.
But what
can happen is only constrained by our imagination and our
ability to actually make it happen.
Every state of an object within a series of events is in a fixed state as the system progresses deterministically, x, y, z..... no deviation.
Correct!
Figurative or literal? Figurative. What
can happen is
not constrained by what
will happen.
"Nothing else
will happen" is the literal fact of the matter.
"Nothing else
can happen" is a
figure of speech, derived by "if nothing else will happen then it is
as if nothing else can happen".
Like all figurative statements, "nothing else
can happen" is literally false.
We're driving down the road and see a traffic light up ahead. The light is currently red, but it could turn green by the time we get there. On the other hand, it could remain red. So, we slow down. But as we arrive it turns green, so we resume speed. Our passenger, a hard determinist, asks, "Why did you slow down back there?". We respond, "The light could have remained red." The passenger says, "No, you're wrong. It was determined, from any prior point in time, that the light would be green when we arrived. So, why did you slow down?". We respond, "BECAUSE IT COULD HAVE REMAINED RED!". "No, it could not!", he exclaims. We pull over to the side of the road, and say "Get out of the car." Then we drive off without his nonsense.
Whatever the lights do is determined by whatever is happening within the system. We don't have that information. Because we don't have the necessary information, we wait to see what happens. A state of waiting in anticipation is our condition until fresh information prompts us to move; the lights have turned green
But we
didn't wait to see what happens. We slowed down, just in case the light remained red. If we had not slowed down and the light remained red, then we would have gone through the red light, and collided with cars in the crossing road.
We took action, we slowed down,
upon the possibility that the light would remain red.
For safety sake, we needed to consider both possibilities, the possibility that the light could change green and the possibility that the light could remain red.
Two possibilities.
Two things that
could have happened. Not just one.
That's how the human mind
must work in order to avoid traffic collisions.
To suggest otherwise creates nonsense.
I'll just close with the same quote you provided, and hope that eventually you understand what it means:
''Each state of the universe and its events are the necessary result of its prior state and prior events. ("Events" change the state of things.)
Determinism means that events will proceed naturally (as if "fixed as a matter of natural law") and reliably ("without deviation").
However, in order for determinism to be true, it must include all events. For example, determinism cannot exclude the effects of natural forces, like volcanoes and tidal waves or a meteor hitting the Earth. Determinism cannot exclude the effects of biological organisms that transform their environments, like tree seedlings changing bare land into a forest. Determinism cannot exclude the effects of deliberate choices, like when the chef prepares me the salad that I chose for lunch.
All of these events, including my choices, were causally necessary from any prior point in time. And they all proceeded without deviation from the Big Bang to this moment.'' - Marvin Edwards.