DBT
Contributor
I have made no extraordinary claims. ...
But you're doing it right now. For example:
There is no choosing in determinism.
You've seen the people in the restaurant, choosing from the menu what they will order for dinner. To claim that choosing is not happening when it is happening right there in front of us is an extraordinary claim!
The point is that none of this is of our choosing, regulative control, ...
If the customers are not controlling what they are choosing then point to the object that is controlling their choice. There is no other object in the physical universe that is doing the choosing for them. It really is them.
The waiter, observing reality objectively, sees the customers making choices from the menu and telling him what they will have for dinner. You cannot convince the waiter that these people did not order what they ordered without extraordinary evidence. Philosophic sophistry will not cut it.
... or that our will has the freedom to make a difference. If will has no agency, will not being able to make a difference to what are determined outcomes, will has no freedom and there is no reason to define 'will' as 'free will.'
There is no such thing as a "free floating will". People choose what they will do. What they choose to do causes effects in the world around them. Will the chef be fixing us a Salad, or will the chef be cooking us a Steak? It is up to us, and only us, to decide.
That which chooses what will happen next exercises control. In the restaurant, the agency that controls what the chef will be doing is the customer who chooses what they will order for dinner.
Determinism asserts that all of these events, unfold necessarily, exactly as we observed them. Every choice will have a history of reliable causes reaching back as far as anyone cares to imagine. But the meaningful and relevant causes of these choices exist locally within each diner in the restaurant. None of the diner's prior causes can participate in this choice without first becoming an integral part of who and what the diner is. It is only the diners themselves that have any causal agency at this point in time.
These are the indisputable empirical facts. And the incompatibilist has nothing other than philosophic sophistry to dispute them.
It is simply 'will' - an urge or prompt to act (inner necessity)- inevitably followed by action (as determined).
It is not always as simple as choosing a dinner. Consider our carpenter, who chooses to build herself a home. There will be hundreds of decisions as she chooses the location, the materials, the flooring, the fixtures, the subcontractors, etc. Each of these choices will control something about the house she is building and what she and the other workers will be doing.
There is no other object in the physical universe that will make these choices for her. Her own choices will control what she will do. And that remains the case in a fully deterministic universe, because it will be causally necessary, from any prior point in time, that she herself will be making exactly those choices.
Our Carpenter doesn't exist or operate in a vacuum. There are countless elements at work shaping the thoughts and action of our Carpenter. It's called Life and the World. And if the world is deterministic, the actions of the Carpenter are determined by the conditions and events in both the world and his immediate environment.
The problem with that theory is that "Life and the World" have no interest in whether the woman builds a house or not. She is the one who decided to build the house, because she has the skills and the motivation to build it. After she learned carpentry, and she worked to save up the money, and she imagined building a home for herself, and she worked out the design, and she decided it was a real possibility, and it was she that decided "I will build my house now, rather than waiting any longer". Her deliberately chosen will, to build that house for herself, motivated and directed her subsequent thoughts and actions as she carried out her intent to build it.
It was her own freely chosen intent that sustained her efforts, from driving the first nail to moving in.
The notion that "Life and the World" possessed the necessary intent, rather than her, is superstitious nonsense. It does not comply with the empirical facts of what was actually determined to happen.
All of this is exactly my point with my example of the architect having to make literally hundreds if not thousands of choices to build the best building possible, and each choice had to be correct in order to bring off the end product. Who designed the building? The architect, of course. DBT thinks the big bang designed it, as if the big bang were sentient, knowledgeable about architeture, and took an interest in a structure being erected more than 10 billion years in the future. I characterized my example as a reductio proving the absurdity of hard determinism, and your carpenter example is the same kind of reductio. Hard determinism is obviously false; more, it is absurd.
You still don't realize that, given determinism as it is defined by compatibilists, each and every incremental step in the process of the evolution of the system is fixed, that there are no alternatives?
That, according to the given definition, there can be no alternate actions?
Nobody is arguing that we can't think, plan and act, just that the thoughts and actions that happen, happen necessarily.
''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.''