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Compatibilism: What's that About?

Yes, of course, he could have bought out the whole store. Better to say this: Jim can either order pistachos, or not order pistachios. He cannot BOTH order pistachios, and NOT order pistachios, at the same time. That would be a violation of the Law of Non-contradiction. The relevant bit is that because it is within his power to either order or not order pistachios, Jim has free will in a deterministic universe.
Can you prove that law of non-contradiction is valid?

Let's look at the statement

"This statement is false"


Is that statement true or false? It has to be true, or it has to be false, according to the law of non contradiction. Which is it?
This embeds a deep misunderstanding of noncontradiction.

The statement can be a contradiction, and so a nonsensical statement. It can be an invalid construction.

An actual thing however, can only be exactly what it is.

"The statement 'this statement is false' is nonsense" is a true statement.
 
Yes, of course, he could have bought out the whole store. Better to say this: Jim can either order pistachos, or not order pistachios. He cannot BOTH order pistachios, and NOT order pistachios, at the same time. That would be a violation of the Law of Non-contradiction. The relevant bit is that because it is within his power to either order or not order pistachios, Jim has free will in a deterministic universe.
Can you prove that law of non-contradiction is valid?

Let's look at the statement

"This statement is false"


Is that statement true or false? It has to be true, or it has to be false, according to the law of non contradiction. Which is it?
This embeds a deep misunderstanding of noncontradiction.

The statement can be a contradiction, and so a nonsensical statement. It can be an invalid construction.

An actual thing however, can only be exactly what it is.

"The statement 'this statement is false' is nonsense" is a true statement.

It can be dismissed as nonsense, but it shows a principle,, that the law of non contradiction is not absolute.
 
"One might as well claim that being in jail doesn't really limit one's freedom on the grounds that if one were not in jail, he'd be free to come and go as he pleased". - Alvin Plantinga

It's reassuring to know Alvin's not on my team.

Yet he is right and you are wrong. His remark nails the fallacy of compatibilism, while you are yet to grasp the basics of determinism and its implications.
 
"One might as well claim that being in jail doesn't really limit one's freedom on the grounds that if one were not in jail, he'd be free to come and go as he pleased". - Alvin Plantinga

It's reassuring to know Alvin's not on my team.
Plantinga does believe in free will, however. He calls it “transworld depravity.”

The issue here is the compatibility between free will and determinism. Plantinga nails the fallacy of compatibilism in one sentence, clear, concise and to the point.
 
Yes, of course, he could have bought out the whole store. Better to say this: Jim can either order pistachos, or not order pistachios. He cannot BOTH order pistachios, and NOT order pistachios, at the same time. That would be a violation of the Law of Non-contradiction. The relevant bit is that because it is within his power to either order or not order pistachios, Jim has free will in a deterministic universe.
Can you prove that law of non-contradiction is valid?

Let's look at the statement

"This statement is false"


Is that statement true or false? It has to be true, or it has to be false, according to the law of non contradiction. Which is it?
This embeds a deep misunderstanding of noncontradiction.

The statement can be a contradiction, and so a nonsensical statement. It can be an invalid construction.

An actual thing however, can only be exactly what it is.

"The statement 'this statement is false' is nonsense" is a true statement.

It can be dismissed as nonsense, but it shows a principle,, that the law of non contradiction is not absolute.
Then you misunderstood the law of noncontradiction.

Noncontradiction does not imply images can't contain lies and nonsense.
 
"One might as well claim that being in jail doesn't really limit one's freedom on the grounds that if one were not in jail, he'd be free to come and go as he pleased". - Alvin Plantinga

It's reassuring to know Alvin's not on my team.
Plantinga does believe in free will, however. He calls it “transworld depravity.”

The issue here is the compatibility between free will and determinism. Plantinga nails the fallacy of compatibilism in one sentence, clear, concise and to the point.
You'd need to offer more than a two word ad-hom argument. Just because you don't like the discussion of LT style logic, doesn't make it any less useful or logical. It just means you think it is "depravity". Your emotional gut reactions don't have any leverage on that though, on what is logical.

Also, there's a problem in that sentence by plantinga, and I'll love on the first post that points it out. Oh gosh is it a big hole, too.

The answer:
for to say 'i can walk out the jail if it is unlocked MY freedom is not limited' is to make a logical error, because 'if the door is unlocked' does not describe 'my' freedom, but rather a degree of freedom of the jail. Degrees of freedom of an object can only allow extension along modifications of that object or thereabouts. Plantinga doesn't just change the jail, he moves the whole rest of the universe.
 
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'Fixed' and 'no deviation', guarantee that all events will occur exactly as they do occur and in no other way. Everything always happens exactly as it happens.

Not only does it guarantee things can't happen any other way, it eliminates any claim for free will. Given the terms, nothing is willed. Everything, all events are entailed by the system as it evolves. No free will involved.

None of those conclusions are supported by the facts.

The facts in this instance are the given terms and conditions for determinism. Conditions at time t and how things go fixed as a matter of natural law.

Which includes your definition.

These being the facts of the matter in this dispute, the issue is the relationship between the notion of free will as compatibilists define it, and determinism as it is being defined.

Where, for the given reasons, free will - as defined - is clearly not compatible with determinism as it is defined.
Determinism means that everything must happen precisely as it does happen. All of the choices you make for yourself will inevitably be made by you. They will not be made by any of the events that occurred prior to you, but will only be made specifically by you at that specific time and in that specific place. Why? Because that is exactly how things were 'fixed' to play out, with 'no deviation'.

That's the fatal flaw for free will, you don't have two or more realizable options in determinism. Every action is entailed, fixed, as the system evolves. The 'decision' must be precisely as determined, not freely chosen.

If it is not freely chosen, it is not freely willed.

If it is not freely willed, free will is an illusion.

Being an illusion, free will does not exist within a deterministic world (as determinism is defined).

'' Determinism, in philosophy and science, the thesis that all events in the universe, including human decisions and actions, are causally inevitable. Determinism entails that, in a situation in which a person makes a certain decision or performs a certain action, it is impossible that he or she could have made any other decision or performed any other action. In other words, it is never true that people could have decided or acted otherwise than they actually did.''

Free will? Merely an illusion formed through limited information being available to the brain, we have the surface appearance, we respond to events as the brain perceives them.

''Understanding that free will is an illusionmeans recognizing that people behave in the only way they know how. As such, it is important to realize that, when people act in harmful ways, it is because they are ignorant of the forces that actually shape their thoughts and behaviors.''
 
"One might as well claim that being in jail doesn't really limit one's freedom on the grounds that if one were not in jail, he'd be free to come and go as he pleased". - Alvin Plantinga

Plantinga nails the fallacy of compatibilism in one sentence, clear, concise and to the point.
Do you really see living in a deterministic universe as comparable to living in a jail cell?

It would certainly explain why you make such bizarre claims about determinism.
 
"One might as well claim that being in jail doesn't really limit one's freedom on the grounds that if one were not in jail, he'd be free to come and go as he pleased". - Alvin Plantinga

Plantinga nails the fallacy of compatibilism in one sentence, clear, concise and to the point.
Do you really see living in a deterministic universe as comparable to living in a jail cell?

It would certainly explain why you make such bizarre claims about determinism.
No, rather he doesn't see the fallacy in the Plantinga quote. Can you spot it without clicking on my spoiler?
 
The facts in this instance are the given terms and conditions for determinism. Conditions at time t and how things go fixed as a matter of natural law. Which includes your definition. These being the facts of the matter in this dispute, the issue is the relationship between the notion of free will as compatibilists define it, and determinism as it is being defined.

Well, let's just check to see if you're correct.

Determinism asserts that every event will be reliably caused by prior events, such that each event must necessarily happen exactly as it does happen, without deviation, as if it were fixed from any prior point in time.

Free will is an event in which a person chooses for themselves what they will do, while free of coercion and other forms of undue influence (hypnosis, mental illness, manipulation, authoritative command, etc.).

So, is there any conflict between these two notions? Or, are the two notions compatible?

Well, since free will only requires freedom from coercion and undue influence, and does not require freedom from causal necessity, the compatibilist notion of free will does not conflict with a deterministic world in which all events are reliably caused by prior events.

And, since such a deterministic world must include all events, it must include the event in which a person decides for themselves what they will do while free of coercion and undue influence. So, determinism does not conflict with any compatibilist free will event. In fact, such events must necessarily happen, precisely as they do happen.

Therefore, the incompatibilist's assertion is false, and the compatibilist's assertion is true.

If it is not freely chosen, it is not freely willed.

The compatibilist's choice only needs to be free of coercion and undue influence in order to be free. It does not need to be free of reliable cause and effect (a rather silly notion of freedom since every freedom we have requires reliably causing some effect).

If it is not freely willed, free will is an illusion.

Well, we've just proved it was "freely willed" when using the compatibilist definition of free will.
And, since the compatibilist definition of free will is a deterministic event, it necessarily must happen in physical reality, and therefore it cannot be called an "illusion".

''Determinism, in philosophy and science, the thesis that all events in the universe, including human decisions and actions, are causally inevitable. Determinism entails that, in a situation in which a person makes a certain decision or performs a certain action, it is impossible that he or she could have made any other decision or performed any other action. In other words, it is never true that people could have decided or acted otherwise than they actually did.''

In a compatibilist free will event, no one ever thinks or acts differently than they actually think and act. So, the definition is satisfied in that respect.

However, this definition of determinism has a serious logical flaw. The claim that a person "could not" have thought or acted differently shifts from the context of actualities to the context of possibilities. Within the context of possibilities there are always multiple things that "can" happen now, "could have" happened in the past, and "could" yet happen in the future.

Determinism only exists in the context of actualities. In the context of actualities, only a single thing "will" happen now, "would have" happened in the past, and "will" yet happen in the future. This is the proper context of determinism.

While there is only one thing that "will" happen, there are multiple things that "can" happen. And while there is only one thing that we "will" choose, there are always multiple things that we "can" choose.

To avoid a shift in context, we simply replace "could" with "would". The corrected definition reads like this:

''Determinism, in philosophy and science, is the thesis that all events in the universe, including human decisions and actions, are causally inevitable. Determinism entails that, in a situation in which a person makes a certain decision or performs a certain action, it is impossible that he or she would have made any other decision or performed any other action. In other words, it is never true that people would have decided or acted otherwise than they actually did.''

The conflation of "could" with "would" (or "can" and "will") is a common error that results from figurative thinking. If something definitely "will not" happen, then it seems AS IF it "could not" happen. But the notion of what "could have" happened is always used to refer to things that did not happen, and only "would have" happened under different circumstances. Determinism knows nothing about such things, because determinism only applies to what actually happens, and never to things that could have happened but did not happen.

Free will? Merely an illusion formed through limited information being available to the brain, we have the surface appearance, we respond to events as the brain perceives them.

Sorry, but the word "illusion" cannot apply to anything that actually happens. Walk into a restaurant and watch the customers as they browse the menu of alternate possibilities, consider their options, and place their orders. Choosing is happening in physical reality. Ask any neuroscientist about the brain's decision making function. It's really happening, and our own brains are doing it.

''Understanding that free will is an illusion means recognizing that people behave in the only way they know how. As such, it is important to realize that, when people act in harmful ways, it is because they are ignorant of the forces that actually shape their thoughts and behaviors.''

Unfortunately it does not work like that. If free will is an illusion then there is no hope that the criminal offender can be rehabilitated. If we tell the offender that, due to determinism, he had no control over his past behavior, then we must also tell him that, due to determinism, he will have no control over his future behavior. Such a notion would make rehabilitation impossible. Rehabilitation requires that the offender understands that he has within himself the ability to change, to take control of his life, and to live as a better person.
 
"One might as well claim that being in jail doesn't really limit one's freedom on the grounds that if one were not in jail, he'd be free to come and go as he pleased". - Alvin Plantinga

Plantinga nails the fallacy of compatibilism in one sentence, clear, concise and to the point.
Do you really see living in a deterministic universe as comparable to living in a jail cell?

It would certainly explain why you make such bizarre claims about determinism.

Think about the implications of determinism as it has been defined by compatibilists on this forum, then apply the terms and references to the concept of freedom and choice/having multiple realizable options at any given time.

Plantinga nailed it.
 
"One might as well claim that being in jail doesn't really limit one's freedom on the grounds that if one were not in jail, he'd be free to come and go as he pleased". - Alvin Plantinga

Plantinga nails the fallacy of compatibilism in one sentence, clear, concise and to the point.
Do you really see living in a deterministic universe as comparable to living in a jail cell?

It would certainly explain why you make such bizarre claims about determinism.
No, rather he doesn't see the fallacy in the Plantinga quote. Can you spot it without clicking on my spoiler?

You have yet to grasp the basics of determinism. ;)
 
"One might as well claim that being in jail doesn't really limit one's freedom on the grounds that if one were not in jail, he'd be free to come and go as he pleased". - Alvin Plantinga

Plantinga nails the fallacy of compatibilism in one sentence, clear, concise and to the point.
Do you really see living in a deterministic universe as comparable to living in a jail cell?

It would certainly explain why you make such bizarre claims about determinism.

Think about the implications of determinism as it has been defined by compatibilists on this forum, then apply the terms and references to the concept of freedom and choice/having multiple realizable options at any given time.

Plantinga nailed it.

I think we've all thought about the implications of determinism and find that it does not imply what you assume it must imply.

And what is it that you think Plantinga "nailed" in his faulty analogy? No one has claimed that being in jail is not a meaningful constraint upon our ability to do what we want. But, as it turns out, reliable cause and effect, in itself, is not at all a meaningful constraint, because what we will inevitably do is exactly what we would have decided to do anyway.
 
"One might as well claim that being in jail doesn't really limit one's freedom on the grounds that if one were not in jail, he'd be free to come and go as he pleased". - Alvin Plantinga

Plantinga nails the fallacy of compatibilism in one sentence, clear, concise and to the point.
Do you really see living in a deterministic universe as comparable to living in a jail cell?

It would certainly explain why you make such bizarre claims about determinism.
No, rather he doesn't see the fallacy in the Plantinga quote. Can you spot it without clicking on my spoiler?

You have yet to grasp the basics of determinism. ;)

At this point Jarhyn has a better grasp on the basics than you.
 
"One might as well claim that being in jail doesn't really limit one's freedom on the grounds that if one were not in jail, he'd be free to come and go as he pleased". - Alvin Plantinga

Plantinga nails the fallacy of compatibilism in one sentence, clear, concise and to the point.
Do you really see living in a deterministic universe as comparable to living in a jail cell?

It would certainly explain why you make such bizarre claims about determinism.
No, rather he doesn't see the fallacy in the Plantinga quote. Can you spot it without clicking on my spoiler?

You have yet to grasp the basics of determinism. ;)

At this point Jarhyn has a better grasp on the basics than you.
I'm a little sad nobody took a swing at the fallacy that DBT doesn't seem to understand.

How is it that I'm the only one here who spotted it? That Plantinga conflates his degrees of freedom with the degree of freedom of "the jail", misunderstanding the difference between what HE "can" do if HE is modified in the system vs what something else "can" do if "something else" is modified?

Also, I dare say I understand more than just "the basics". I've actually semantically completed "freedom", "will", and "choice"*.

That's like saying Langland understands "the basics" of math.

Technically, Tarn Adams did most of the work...
 
The facts in this instance are the given terms and conditions for determinism. Conditions at time t and how things go fixed as a matter of natural law. Which includes your definition. These being the facts of the matter in this dispute, the issue is the relationship between the notion of free will as compatibilists define it, and determinism as it is being defined.

Well, let's just check to see if you're correct.

I stick to the given terms and conditions of determinism.

Determinism asserts that every event will be reliably caused by prior events, such that each event must necessarily happen exactly as it does happen, without deviation, as if it were fixed from any prior point in time.

Exactly. No deviation. No alternate choice.... not just 'as if fixed,' but absolutely fixed by the prior state of the system
Free will is an event in which a person chooses for themselves what they will do, while free of coercion and other forms of undue influence (hypnosis, mental illness, manipulation, authoritative command, etc.).

A person doesn't choose. The system entails all actions. The person is an element within the system, inseparable from it. A person doesn't have alternate choices.

Choice requires two or more realizable options in any given instance.

Determinism means that all action proceed without deviation as determined, hence, without choice.


Choice
1. an act of choosing between two or more possibilities

Determinism, according to the given definition - all events proceeding without deviation, no alternate actions - determinism does not permit two or more realizable options to choose from.

So, is there any conflict between these two notions? Or, are the two notions compatible?

Flawed premises produce a flawed definition of free will in the form of compatibilism.

Well, since free will only requires freedom from coercion and undue influence, and does not require freedom from causal necessity, the compatibilist notion of free will does not conflict with a deterministic world in which all events are reliably caused by prior events.

Freedom from coercion is not freedom from necessitation.


”If the neurobiology level is causally sufficient to determine your behavior, then the fact that you had the experience of freedom at the higher level is really irrelevant.” - John Searle.


''An action’s production by a deterministic process, even when the agent satisfies the conditions on moral responsibility specified by compatibilists, presents no less of a challenge to basic-desert responsibility than does deterministic manipulation by other agents. '' - Oxford University Press.

And, since such a deterministic world must include all events, it must include the event in which a person decides for themselves what they will do while free of coercion and undue influence. So, determinism does not conflict with any compatibilist free will event. In fact, such events must necessarily happen, precisely as they do happen. Therefore, the incompatibilist's assertion is false, and the compatibilist's assertion is true.

Incompatibilists rightly point out that even if actions are not forced, coerced or unduly influenced by others are nonetheless fixed by the prior state of the system, consequently, they are neither freely chosen or freely willed.


If it is not freely chosen, it is not freely willed.

The compatibilist's choice only needs to be free of coercion and undue influence in order to be free. It does not need to be free of reliable cause and effect (a rather silly notion of freedom since every freedom we have requires reliably causing some effect).

Necessitation is more restrictive on choice than anything that other people can apply. Necessitation, another word for determinism, fixes all outcomes, eliminating freedom of will.

Nothing is freely willed. Will is fixed by antecedents.

''The No Choice Principle implies that I cannot have a choice about anything that is an unavoidable consequence of something I have no control of.'' - John Searle.



If it is not freely willed, free will is an illusion.

Well, we've just proved it was "freely willed" when using the compatibilist definition of free will.
And, since the compatibilist definition of free will is a deterministic event, it necessarily must happen in physical reality, and therefore it cannot be called an "illusion".

A flawed definition isn't proof of anything. Compatibilism gives a flawed definition of free will.

Flawed basically because it ignores or dismisses necessitation. That all actions are necessitated by prior states of the system.

Which is a far greater restriction on freedom of will than mere coercion or 'undue influence.'

Given the definition of determinism, it's an absolute restriction on freedom of will.

''Understanding that free will is an illusion means recognizing that people behave in the only way they know how. As such, it is important to realize that, when people act in harmful ways, it is because they are ignorant of the forces that actually shape their thoughts and behaviors.''

Unfortunately it does not work like that. If free will is an illusion then there is no hope that the criminal offender can be rehabilitated. If we tell the offender that, due to determinism, he had no control over his past behavior, then we must also tell him that, due to determinism, he will have no control over his future behavior. Such a notion would make rehabilitation impossible. Rehabilitation requires that the offender understands that he has within himself the ability to change, to take control of his life, and to live as a better person.

Modifying behaviour has been explained numerous times. Nobody has claimed that our behaviour can't be modified, changed, manipulated, ie, punishment is a deterrent, therapy, chemical interventions, etc, etc...

This has nothing to do with freedom of will. People steal, laws are put into place in response (information that alters the system, brain, etc) which deters most but not all people from stealing, those that offend regardless face further penalties which may or may not work depending on the mental state of the offender, etcetera, etcetera...

Again;
On the neurology of morals
''Patients with medial prefrontal lesions often display irresponsible behavior, despite being intellectually unimpaired. But similar lesions occurring in early childhood can also prevent the acquisition of factual knowledge about accepted standards of moral behavior.''

Quote;
''Because most behavior is driven by brain networks we do not consciously control, the legal system will eventually be forced to shift its emphasis from retribution to a forward-looking analysis of future behavior. In the light of modern neuroscience, it no longer makes sense to ask "was it his fault, or his biology's fault, or the fault of his background?", because these issues can never be disentangled. Instead, the only sensible question can be "what do we do from here?" -- in terms of customized sentencing, tailored rehabilitation, and refined incentive structuring.''
 
I stick to the given terms and conditions of determinism.
No, you stick to YOUR given terms and conditions which you NONSENSICALLY declare that the mathematical extensions that we discuss on a state is problematic. You can't even stick to the definition of "can" and "must".
determinism does not permit two or more realizable options to choose from
Yes it does.

We've discussed the difference between"can" and "shall". Your inability to grasp the difference is, I think, related to your inability to grasp the fallacy in your Plantinga quote.

Ask yourself, do you think you are being rigorous in your thought process when you have supported a fallacious quote twice, despite it containing a clear conflation?

I expect FDI has their own issues to work with given the length of their life and the prevalence of certain afflictions of the mind that creep in on that end of life. You DBT have far less excuse.
 
I stick to the given terms and conditions of determinism.

And so do I. Determinism asserts that every event will be reliably caused by prior events, such that each event must necessarily happen exactly as it does happen, without deviation, as if it were fixed from any prior point in time.

Exactly. No deviation. No alternate choice.... not just 'as if fixed,' but absolutely fixed by the prior state of the system

Whoa! You just stepped outside of the definition by claiming "no alternate choice". The restaurant example occurs in a perfectly deterministic universe, where every event is reliably caused and inevitably must happen, just so, without deviation. And there is the restaurant menu, filled with alternate choices. Determinism says that we will inevitably choose a specific alternative, but it does not say that alternate choices will not be staring us in the face from the menu. In fact, determinism says that the menu full of alternate choices was inevitable from any prior point in time, and it must be there, without deviation. And we would also inevitably be there, reading the menu.

Not only will the menu inevitably be there, but we will inevitably consider more than one of those many options. The mental events of our comparing these options to our dietary goals and taste preferences will inevitably happen in physical reality, as inevitable neurological processes within our brain. And the deterministic logic performed by our brain will produce a single inevitable choice, that we communicate to the waiter, "I will have the Chef Salad, please".

All of these events are equally deterministic, causally necessary, and inevitably will happen.

As you can see, alternate choices and us choosing between them, are inevitable within a perfectly deterministic system.

A person doesn't choose. The system entails all actions.

The deterministic system entails that the person will inevitably make choices. So "A person doesn't choose" is inconsistent with determinism. Determinism guarantees that every event that happens is causally necessary and inevitably must happen, without deviation, and a person making choices is a real event that actually happens in physical reality.

The claim that "a person doesn't choose" in a deterministic system is demonstrably false. And it has been demonstrated repeatedly for you.

The notion that "a person doesn't choose" is an illusion created by figurative thinking.

Freedom from coercion is not freedom from necessitation.

CORRECT! There is no such thing as "freedom from causal necessity", because that would require being free from reliable cause and effect, and there is no freedom to do anything that does not require us to reliably cause some effect.

Fortunately, causal necessity is never experienced as a constraint, because what we will inevitably do is exactly identical to us just being us, choosing to do what we choose to do. And that is not a meaningful constraint.

So, when we go about defining "free will", we do not require "freedom from causal necessity", but simply freedom from coercion and undue influence. Nothing more. Nothing less.

”If the neurobiology level is causally sufficient to determine your behavior, then the fact that you had the experience of freedom at the higher level is really irrelevant.” - John Searle.

I'm really tired of this constant but false suggestion that freedom and free will are matters of a person's subjective feelings. Go to any window in your home. Try to open it. If the window moves freely then you are free to open it. If the window has become stuck, then you are not free to open it. This is not a matter of your feelings, but a simple empirical observation of your ability to do what you want, and your freedom to do what you want.

Free will is not a feeling. It is an empirical observation. Did you choose to give some money to the begging man or did the man stick a gun in your ribs and demand that you hand over your wallet? One is free will. The other is coercion. And your feelings have nothing at all to do with it.

''An action’s production by a deterministic process, even when the agent satisfies the conditions on moral responsibility specified by compatibilists, presents no less of a challenge to basic-desert responsibility than does deterministic manipulation by other agents. ''

That's obviously false. There is a distinction between the event where it was inevitable that I would voluntarily give a dollar to the beggar and the event where a mugger points a gun at me and demands my wallet. The loss of this distinction, by whoever made that stupid comment, is a significant loss of information that is meaningful to everyone.

Necessitation is more restrictive on choice than anything that other people can apply. Necessitation, another word for determinism, fixes all outcomes, eliminating freedom of will.

If it is necessary that I do exactly what I have voluntarily chosen to do, then no meaningful restriction exists. The restriction is an illusion created by bad philosophy.

''The No Choice Principle implies that I cannot have a choice about anything that is an unavoidable consequence of something I have no control of.'' - John Searle.

Obviously, the "no choice principle" is yet another delusional notion. It incorrectly assumes that an event that has prior causes cannot itself be the cause of subsequent events, because those prior causes must be the true causes. The problem with this illogical notion is that no prior cause can pass this test, because every prior cause also has its own prior causes. Thus, no "true" causes would exist, and determinism evaporates into thin air.

The list of things we do not control, however long, does not eliminate a single item from the list of things that we do control. Which simply means that I get to choose what I will have for breakfast, and my prior causes do not.

''Understanding that free will is an illusion means recognizing that people behave in the only way they know how. As such, it is important to realize that, when people act in harmful ways, it is because they are ignorant of the forces that actually shape their thoughts and behaviors.''

Unfortunately it does not work like that. If free will is an illusion then there is no hope that the criminal offender can be rehabilitated. If we tell the offender that, due to determinism, he had no control over his past behavior, then we must also tell him that, due to determinism, he will have no control over his future behavior. Such a notion would make rehabilitation impossible. Rehabilitation requires that the offender understands that he has within himself the ability to change, to take control of his life, and to live as a better person.

Quote;
''Because most behavior is driven by brain networks we do not consciously control, the legal system will eventually be forced to shift its emphasis from retribution to a forward-looking analysis of future behavior. In the light of modern neuroscience, it no longer makes sense to ask "was it his fault, or his biology's fault, or the fault of his background?", because these issues can never be disentangled. Instead, the only sensible question can be "what do we do from here?" -- in terms of customized sentencing, tailored rehabilitation, and refined incentive structuring.''

Shifting from retribution to rehabilitation is morally sound. The instinctive motive for retribution was to discourage the offender from repeatedly harming others. The instinct likely evolved to encourage the formation of communities by providing shared notions of what is right and wrong to do. Originally, as traveling tribes, we had no prison system, and "an eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth, life for a life" operated efficiently as both deterrent and penalty. But we can do better than that in modern society, and accomplish the ends of justice (a reduction in overall harm) through rehabilitation of those willing to change through rehabilitation and incarceration of those not willing.

I disagree with the author's suggestion that we can do away with the notion of fault. The fault is the cause. And we need to understand the causes if we are to take steps to correct them. If his thinking is at fault, then counseling might correct it. If his biology is at fault, then medication might correct it. If background is at fault, then we might pursue social changes that are long overdue. It is most likely that multiple factors will be involved.

But it seems the author comes around to the same conclusion. Sentencing, rehabilitation, and incentive structuring would be tailored to the offender, according to our understanding of the specific causes that apply to his case.
 
I stick to the given terms and conditions of determinism.
No, you stick to YOUR given terms and conditions which you NONSENSICALLY declare that the mathematical extensions that we discuss on a state is problematic. You can't even stick to the definition of "can" and "must".

Crock, I have quoted the definitions that were given by you and Marvin. They are your terms and definitions.

Terms and definitions that you gave, but fail to understand. That's the sad part.

Not understanding the terms, references and implications of your own definition of determinism, you have no hope of understanding the idea of free will in relation to your own definition.

Based on this inability to grasp the implications of determinism, as you yourself define it, you have no hope of understanding incompatibilism. Which is worse than sad.
 
I stick to the given terms and conditions of determinism.
No, you stick to YOUR given terms and conditions which you NONSENSICALLY declare that the mathematical extensions that we discuss on a state is problematic. You can't even stick to the definition of "can" and "must".

Crock, I have quoted the definitions that were given by you and Marvin. They are your terms and definitions.

Terms and definitions that you gave, but fail to understand. That's the sad part.

Not understanding the terms, references and implications of your own definition of determinism, you have no hope of understanding the idea of free will in relation to your own definition.

Based on this inability to grasp the implications of determinism, as you yourself define it, you have no hope of understanding incompatibilism. Which is worse than sad.

Exchanging insults is not having a discussion.
 
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