Your argument is based upon the notion that, if the choice was inevitable since the big bang, then it is AS IF choosing never really happened. The problem is that choosing does happen. We can walk into any restaurant and watch people choosing what they will order for dinner.
Actions are not chosen, they are determined. Each action is entailed by the prior state of the system.
You may be able say 'chosen' if there was a selection. Unfortunately, that's not the case. As there are no possible alternatives, each and every state of the system being entailed by its prior state, no choice exists.
That is the no choice principle in determinism.
Your definition of determinism entails the no choice principle.
Determinism only entails that all events will reliable be caused by prior events, forming an unbroken "chain" of causation from any point in the past to any point in the future.
The given definition of determinism stipulates that events are fixed by the prior state of the system. That certainly is reliable. So reliable that it eliminates alternatives and choice.
There is nothing in the definition of determinism that excludes the event of a person choosing for themselves what they will have for dinner. It is just another event, just like every other event, reliably caused by prior events, and reliably causing subsequent events (for example, the chef preparing the dinners that were ordered).
Nobody chooses for themselves because everybody and everything is an aspect of the system as it evolves without deviation.
No independent or autonomous decisions are possible.
The "no choice principle" is not a valid principle, due to the simple fact that choosing from a menu of options actually happens in the real world (and, it happens deterministically, of course).
It's entailed in the given terms: ''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.
''A deterministic system is a system in which no randomness is involved in the development of future states of the system.'' - Jarhyn
The 'No Choice Principle' is just another way of saying ''causally necessary'' and ''no randomness is involved in the development of future states of the system.''
The events of the universe, the world, human affairs, etc, must - according to the given terms - proceed without deviation.
Absolutely.
Including the implications for the notion of free will.
No alternatives equates to no choice.
But there are always alternatives, and choices,
within the choosing operation itself. So, "no alternatives", is simply false, and "no choice" continues to be false as well. Both alternatives and choices are found indelibly written within the causal chain.
There are no alternatives. ''Without deviation' rules out alternatives. As pointed out, each option, menu list, to be a doctor, lawyer, chemist, must necessarily be realized, not chosen. Nobody chose to be Einstein or Hawking, events, life the world produced these geniuses, their genetic makeup, circumstances and life experiences shaped and formed their personalities, drives and ambitions.
The test between "literal" and "figurative" is simply to objectively observe what is actually happening in the real world. For example, we watch people in the restaurant reading the menu and placing their orders. This corresponds to the definition of "choosing". From the Oxford English Dictionary: "To take by preference out of all that are available; to select; to take as that which one prefers, or in accordance with one's free will and preference."
It has the appearance of choosing. Given the terms and conditions of determinism, that appearance is an illusion.
Each customer has only one possible action. Bob (makeup, personality, taste in food, how he feels on the day) must necessarily order steak, his wife Betty, being on a health kick, wanting to slim, feeling bloated, must necessarily order salad. Each and every customer according to their state and condition in that instance in time, no deviation.
All the options on the menu are ordered, but not freely willed or freely chosen.
Not freely chosen because there was never a possibility of anything else.
''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.
''A deterministic system is a system in which no randomness is involved in the development of future states of the system.'' - Jarhyn
This is not about communication, but a question of the ultimate nature of the world, if deterministic, how determinism relates to our thoughts and actions; whether we have free will.
But, when we use figurative thinking and speaking, we distort the truth about the actual nature of the world and what is actually happening.
No we don't. Our figurative or abstract thinking is entailed by the state of the system as it evolves because nothing is external the system is at work. The brain is an aspect of the system and its abilities are determined by its makeup.
What we think is a matter of information - external inputs - interacting with neural architecture as it processes the information, producing thoughts, feeling, imagination, projecting ideas and 'options' that may or may not be realizable for you.
They are not choosing, not if their selection and action is entailed before they even think about it, and the option they take, rather than being freely chosen, is fixed by prior states of the system.
What you continue to miss is that determinism means that, it was entailed and fixed, that the event in which they decided for themselves what they would order for dinner, would actually happen in the real world, exactly as we saw it happening in the restaurant.
I don't miss it, I reject it. I reject it because it contradicts the given terms and conditions of a determined system.
''Over the
past few decades, gathering evidence from both psychology and the neurosciences has provided convincing support for the idea that free will is an illusion. (Read this and this, but for a contrarian view, also read this.) Of course, most people can’t relate to the idea that free will is an illusion, and there’s a good reason why. It feels as if we exercise free will all the time. For instance, it seems that you are exercising free will in choosing to read this article. Similarly, it seems that you exercise free will when you deny yourself the pleasure of eating tasty-but-unhealthy food, or when you overcome laziness to work out at the gym.
But these choices do not necessarily reflect free will. To understand why, consider why you sometimes deny yourself an unhealthy-but-tasty snack. It’s because you were, at some point in your life, made to recognize the long-term negative effects of eating such food. Perhaps you noticed that consuming unhealthy food makes you feel heavy, or that regularly consuming such food makes your blood pressure shoot up. Or perhaps your doctor told you that you need to stop eating unhealthy food; or maybe you read about the negative effects of consuming unhealthy food in a magazine. In other words, you deny yourself the pleasure of consuming unhealthy food because of exposure to external inputs—feedback from your body or from others—over which you had no control. Had you been exposed to a different set of inputs—e.g., despite consuming unhealthy food, your health did not suffer, or your doctor never dissuaded you from eating unhealthy food—you wouldn’t deny yourself the pleasure of eating tasty-but-unhealthy food.
If you think carefully about any decision you have made in the past, you will recognize that all of them were ultimately based on similar—genetic or social—inputs to which you had been exposed. And you will also discover that you had no control over these inputs, which means that you had no free will in taking the decisions you did. For instance, you had no choice in where, to whom, and in what period of time, you were born. You also had no choice in the kind of neighbors and friends to whom you were exposed during early childhood. You therefore had no choice in how you made your decisions during that time.''
The term ''Free Will'' implies the ability to choose, to have actual realizable options whenever you are presented with them.
Both the ability to choose and the menu of actual realizable options are right there, in the restaurant, for all to see.
Different people, different actions, each (necessarily) according to their own state and condition in that time and place.
Yet, given the given terms, that is not possible.
Apparently, you're wrong about that. We cannot say that the menu, the restaurant, or the people choosing are "not possible", because we're standing there looking at it. The correct understanding of determinism would lead us to conclude that it was inevitable that each person would be making that choice for themselves, and would do so while free of coercion and undue influence. It is not necessary (and actually impossible) to be free of causation in order to be free of coercion and undue influence.
You miss the point.
Each and every customer must necessarily order the meal that was determined by an interaction of their own physical and mental makeup in that place and instance in time....and of course, each and every customer is in a different state and condition, different needs, wants, states, etcetera, etcetera; “It might be true that you would have done otherwise if you had wanted, though it is determined that you did not, in fact, want otherwise.” - Robert Kane
''The
brain directs our body’s internal functions. It also integrates sensory impulses and information to form perceptions, thoughts, and memories. The brain gives us self-awareness and the ability to speak and move in the world. Its four major regions make this possible: The cerebrum, with its cerebral cortex, gives us conscious control of our actions. The diencephalon mediates sensations, manages emotions, and commands whole internal systems. The cerebellum adjusts body movements, speech coordination, and balance, while the brain stem relays signals from the spinal cord and directs basic internal functions and reflexes.''