Marvin Edwards
Veteran Member
There, in the restaurant, choosing must be done. Choosing cannot be avoided. There is no deviation that can get you around the choosing. There is no alternative to choosing. Choosing happens because it must happen, specifically at that place and at that time.
There is also the surface appearance of people walking in, sitting at the table, opening the menu, and telling the waiter what they chose. Calling these "the surface appearance" of events does not suggest to us that they did not actually happen.
Well, if we're taking a vote on the single thing that we will all have for dinner, then it might make sense to say that "alternatives exist for the group at large". But that is not the case. The menu of alternate possibilities are available for each customer to choose from, and neither the menu nor the choosing is an illusion.
Yep. We walk in, we open the menu, we choose what we will order, and we tell the waiter. The waiter brings us our dinner and the bill. As you say, "x, y, z, no deviation".
The choosing, just like the walking in, the sitting down, and reading the menu, was "entailed, necessitated, fixed". There is no getting around the choosing. There is the menu, and we have no choice but to choose. Thus saith determinism.
There is no choosing at work in the restaurant or anywhere within a determined system. There is the surface appearance of people selecting their preferences from a list of alternatives.
There is also the surface appearance of people walking in, sitting at the table, opening the menu, and telling the waiter what they chose. Calling these "the surface appearance" of events does not suggest to us that they did not actually happen.
Alternatives exist for the group at large, each option designed to appeal to someone's taste, one orders this, the other orders that....yet in the instance of ordering their meal, no other option is possible, what is ordered in that instance must be ordered and there are no alternatives. It is the illusion of choice
Well, if we're taking a vote on the single thing that we will all have for dinner, then it might make sense to say that "alternatives exist for the group at large". But that is not the case. The menu of alternate possibilities are available for each customer to choose from, and neither the menu nor the choosing is an illusion.
That is how determinism works in each and every instance in time, this then that, x, y, z, no deviation.
Yep. We walk in, we open the menu, we choose what we will order, and we tell the waiter. The waiter brings us our dinner and the bill. As you say, "x, y, z, no deviation".
It's entailment, there are no alternatives in any given action, therefore no choosing. Actions are entailed, necessitated, fixed.
The choosing, just like the walking in, the sitting down, and reading the menu, was "entailed, necessitated, fixed". There is no getting around the choosing. There is the menu, and we have no choice but to choose. Thus saith determinism.