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Why There is No Free-Will (with Richard Carrier)

I'm still wondering why I should care about whether or not I have free will. 🤔
Well, that's entirely up to you.
I'm just not convinced it's necessarily a problem of I don't have it. I guess it's just a reaction to a lot of the rhetoric around other concepts (if you don't have god/purpose in your life, it's a problem!"). Etc.
I mean, is it a problem if someone has a gun to your head, or has you in chains?
Yup. It's also a problem if an asteroid strikes the Earth and I end up dead but there's nothing I can do about that.
Well, yeah. But you can do things about the guns or the chains, including being clever enough to avoid them at least some of the time.

My thought is that if you understand freedom and then nature of it, you will be more likely to escape those chains, and less likely to put others in those chains, or whatever.
 

My thought is that if you understand freedom and then nature of it, you will be more likely to escape those chains, and less likely to put others in those chains, or whatever.
There are people who blame rape victims because they believe it has something to do with the clothes they chose to wear, however. Or they blame the poor for "choosing" to be poor. I don't think there's any correlation to morality with this belief necessarily.
 
And, obviously, it wouldn't exactly make sense to blame someone for not breaking from chains, particularly if they are in shock from trauma.
 
And, obviously, it wouldn't exactly make sense to blame someone for not breaking from chains, particularly if they are in shock from trauma.
I'm not blaming them for not breaking them; it is not blaming someone to tell them how to do a thing and that it may be done now that they know.

Rather it is empowering.

It doesn't mean that a victim is guilty of anything in particular but of understandable ignorance.

The person who does things IS clearly responsible for the things they do; people are allowed to walk on streets dressed whatever way; people are not allowed to harm others.
 
he told a jazz musician that he did not write his own composition but hard determinism did
I heard that before. That was his emotional contrarianism as I understand it.
Outside of biology I think Coyne — who also supports Israeli slaughter in Gaza and attacks trans rights — is a total fuckwit
I didn't hear THAT before. That's sad.

Coyne devotes most of his his time to attacking trans rights, DEI, and “wokeism.” He also contributed to a horrible book of essays, which features a contribution by the execrable Jordan Peterson, that attacks “woke” influence on science. It seems, according to him and the book’s other contributors, that progressives are destroying science, not Trump, RFK Jr., and other madmen who are trying to destroy education in its entirety to ensure that we have a population that will reliably vote MAGGOT.
Yeah, see to me this just looks like Calvinist Christianity of the sort explicitly designed to suffocate people's dreams, but rebranded in a way that makes it seem more appealing to atheists.

They just rename their God "necessity" and try to hide it in a neater way.
Yes, most Calvinists in the past would, out of intellectual dishonesty, say God simply ordains all but does not determine any moral evil to happen, even though they believe all that happens occurs of necessity. However, they believe God does determine an elect group to be saved, and that he does this by direct causation!

But, but, I thought since there were secondary causes at stake (like the scriptures and people preaching to the elect, he would just have to be The Final Cause, right Calvinists? Talk about trying to have your own cake and eat it too, so to speak.

After talking with these scums for a while, you eventually figure out that ordained semantically means to casually determine - so this just shows they were using a euphemism all along. Then, they will tell you he is just the Final Cause of all Evil but The Efficient Cause of all truly genuine good actions. They used to claim God was just the Final Cause of sin because of the role of Secondary Causes, which I have just shown does not work (see my previous comment to Pood on this thread, for those who want further details).

Even with 'Secondary Causes' or whatever you describe it as, God is still (and has to be here, as was previously proved by me)
the Efficient Cause of All things, Sin and Good, because he directly created the secondary causes and efficiently caused Adam & Eve & Holy Angels to have inclinations (motivations) in their natures, without which they could not choose (Johnathan Edwards and John Gerstner even had to admit that God caused all of his initial creations desires).

However, Calvinists and Reformed Baptists are different these days: There are more of them that believe that even if God were to be The Efficient Cause of Evil, he would still be infinitely holy and the embodiment of perfect justice!! Excuse me while I vomit in a bucket. This was in page 6 of Calvinism and The Problem of Evil (Amazon Prime). It just sickens me how Calvinists, these days at least, will deny truth and reason to its face just to defend their client (God) from all accusations. They are worse than any non-Christian they have condemned. What days we live in...
 
I found (most of) the transcript!

I inadvertently hit “select” before the whole thing was over. Here is what I copied (and no, not going to try to sort this by paragraph and spaces between them. This is sufficient to let me comment on key passages):





lo everyone. This is the vice president of internet infidels, Edward Tameisian. You all know me from my


published paper on the origin of evil and theistic art determinism. And I'm the contributing author of a book that


was released a couple of months ago called uh a drop a reason essays from the secular web. And for the sixth time,


I'm going to be interviewing the prince of all Christ myth theorists, the great and legendary Richard Carrier. And we


have a good list of discussions we're going to have today. and we're going to begin it by talking about whether there's libertarian free will or not.


So, I'm going to go into the description of how people choose and explain how the wheel works and then I'm going to bring


up some objections to libertarian free will and then I'm going to ask Carrier for his input. So, before we begin the


discussion on, you know, whether there's libertarian free will or not, we have to discuss, you know, how it is that people are able to will. Um, I was discussing


with Philip Gop the issue of whether one needs a desire or not. And he actually thought that someone doesn't need a


desire in order to choose. And I thought that was counterintuitive, like unreasonable thinking.


It doesn't even make it easy. Like, how can you choose if you're not interested? So, yeah. So, I'm going to I'll have to prove that one needs an incl. So, I'll


just give a a brief example that proves this. Okay. If I went up to most people and said, "Hey, do you want to eat, you know, a pile of dog waste?" They're


going to be like, "No, I'm not going to do that. That's crazy." And I say, "Hey, even if someone gave you, you know, 5,000 bucks to do it, would you say,


would you say yes to it?" They're going to be like, "No." And I'll be like, "Why?" they're going to be like cuz I'm not that inclined to win. So clearly, you know, you have like a can't factor.


The more you're inclined to something via an internal motivation, the more odds you have of choosing it. The less you're inclined you have, the less


inclined you are. You have less of a motivation to choose it. And it makes sense that when that inclination reaches absolutely zero, you won't be motivated


at all. And you'll you will cease to see the dog waste as a motive and you won't be able to choose at all. Now, here's


the thing. You'll still have the power in your brain, like the um part of your brain that if you accessed it, you could


eat it. But yet, you can't. And why? Because you don't have a motivation. So, actually, even then, you can't choose.


Now, someone might say, "Well, you can't choose. Doesn't this mean there's something wrong with you or you're just an automaton?" I'll say, "No, because


it's not as if the person wants to eat but can't. They physically can. They just don't want to. They're just because


when you see something as truly valous, you can't do it. So, there's nothing wrong with the freedom here cuz the person's still free to do as they


please. they just they're just not motivated. They just don't want to eat the food. So that this is


and you can even give an example of when they would, right? Like when like to save a life or some or for a million


dollars, maybe someone would do it for a million dollars, right? So like so yeah, obviously you can you can overcome uh


that, right? So obviously the capability exists and it really is just a but for desire uh explanation. Um but I think


whenever we're having conversations like this and I don't know what Goff specifically said uh like what he


thought he was talking about but um we have to go to the ontology like when we say desire what do we actually


physically mean like what's going on uh in the brain right so a very very


oversimplifica simplified version of this is that basically there's like synapses uh in which you've got


electrical potentials and chemical interactions and when you that when they


when it piles up enough, it actually becomes a cascade and it it flows, right? And but you have to pile all that


[ __ ] up physically to actually get the the signals to go down and actually move


your hand, move your mouth to say a thing, uh eat the poop or whatever. Like he to make the decision, uh there has to


be this cascade. And it's actually a physical thing that has to be built up. It's a form of computation. It's analog.


It's not digital. It's messy. It's complicated. It can be tricked and it could be an error and like all kinds of things, but it's still a physical thing


that's happening in the brain. And that's what we mean by a desire, right? Yeah. When you have that that


accumulation uh of what what do you call it? Synaptic potential that's able to push through


and lead to the cascade that results in everything else, right? So, um and so


yeah, obviously and it's literally physically impossible to move or make or


do anything without that potential happening. because literally the the circuitry doesn't work. Like there's no signal sent uh to move your hand or


whatever it is that that it ultimately results in. Even if it's just a conceptual idea, I'll eat the poop in concept.


Uh that's still a decision regarding what you're willing to say. So you've got the muscles of your mouth like all


of that stuff has to be activated. And even when it's like if you have Tourett syndrome and you're blurting out things


nonsciously, it's the still there that cascade is still there. It's still happening. It's just that you don't have conscious control of it because those


are different parts of the brain, right? So, so yeah, absolutely you 100% have to


have a desire to do an action, right? Like because otherwise it physically is impossible for you to do the action. And


that's any action. So any choice is an action of some kind, whether it's a choice to say a thing, even a choice to


believe a thing, like even a choice to like wander your mind internally from one fantasy to another or from one, you


know, one model of the future to another. like you're there those these are all physical things that are happening and require these physical


potentials and then those potentials are the desires that's what we're talking about and in psychology uh when you talk


about values right or virtues but they usually talk about them as values values


will be defined you'll see in textbooks in psychology as persistent long-term desires right so like there are desires


that just like almost always in place and that defines um the value you have


so you have these readily create these potentials because that's what having the value means is is you set that. So


to do that like if you're like an animal not a sensient person the same thing is true right um but of course the animal


doesn't have cognitive understanding of what it's choosing right it's it's making choices more intuitively than


anything right uh it has you can talk about it having certain kinds of knowledge and lacking certain kinds of knowledge and things like that but it


doesn't really have the cognitive comprehension of what it's doing right like it's not you know so so so but for


us we do and and that cognitive comprehension again is a physical thing that happens in the brain and it has physical effects


downstream in terms of whether you create or don't create these potentials, these synaptic potentials that result in


the cascade that results in action. So, so when you talk about free will, I mean, for the one thing, yeah,


absolutely action without desire is impossible. It's it's there's always a desire whether you understand that or


whether you're using the word desire in a different way or whatever it is, but in the basic sense of what a desire is, yeah, there always has to be a desire to


cause an action. And then the question is, well, are your desires just predetermined, right? Like you have no control over your desires? That's we


also know is not true because the creation of desires is another cascade potential that can actually set up the


brain to be more favorable, less favorable to creating these potentials in the future. And that's how you build values, right? It's Aristotle was right


about this that you got to habituate values. Uh and and because you're actually building the circuitry in your


brain that actually decides mechanically when you build potentials and when you don't and that would result in action.


So uh so all of this is true, but the thing is is that what gives us free will, what we mean by free will is that


we actually have this rational section of the brain that can monitor all of this. Not all of it. We're not in control of everything that goes on in


our brain. People with Tourette's syndrome, for example, don't have total control, but they have control over a


lot. And so when we're talking about free will, we're talking about what that control module can rationally decide. So


it can actually analyze the situation say based on my rational logical analysis of this thing I'm going to push


my potential you know create a desire to do this right so like the potentials are actually being dictated by the logic


circuits by the logical analysis that's physically going on in the brain and so that's free will the when we when we


lack free will is when someone interferes with that when we've made a decision or we want a particular thing and someone says no you're you're not


going to get that we're going to get in your way and do it or we're going to force you like put a gun to your head and so create a different cascade that


is not the cascade you wanted. You didn't choose that and you would not choose that if you had the ability to not choose it. Uh but they're actually


substituting their will for yours because they're saying I want this thing to happen. You don't want this thing to happen. Well, I'm going to point a gun


at you and tell you I'm going to kill you unless you do the thing. And so really it's the person with the gun's


will that is not the agent who's being threatened. It's not their will. It's technically their will in the sense that


they're choosing not to be shot. Uh but we we acknowledge that that is a violation of freedom, right? It's like


so and that's what we mean by violation of freedom. It's not a question about deterministic physics. It's all about


the question of are you free to make this decision or not which is really a political social reality uh on the


outside end and on the inside end you have the most common example is the insanity defense which a lot of people


don't understand how that works in court. Like most people think that you just clear you just get yourself


declared insane and then you're excused for all actions. And that's not how it works in in court at all. You could be


massively insane. You could have a million mental illnesses, certificates that you have of the mental illnesses and everything completely irrelevant in


court. The only thing they want to know for the insanity of the defense is did you know what you were doing and did you


have the ability to choose not to do it? Like did you do it anyway? Right? And so like an epileptic doesn't have conscious


control over the movements of their body. So they can't like that's not a question. They don't have free will over the movement of their body when they're


having an epileptic epileptic fit. But when you're not having epileptic fit, you do have rational control over your


body. So you so then you can be blamed for the things because really what's being blamed is the module that made the


decision, right? So in epilepsy, that module is not making the decision to have an epileptic fit. So it can't be


blamed for it, right? It didn't do it. But the module, the rational module that's deciding to act when you're free


to act, um it did do it. And so when we're looking for like responsibility, that's what we're looking for. Can did


that module cause it? The the rational module, the thing that actually constitutes you as a person combined


with all the the data and information. So like that's the thing we're looking for. So violation of free will is when


like the epileptic case or more common case is like you take a schizophrenic


who hallucinates that someone's attacking them. They kill them in self-defense and then realize, oh [ __ ]


that was a hallucination. They weren't attacking me all along. that would work as a defense if you could prove that that's what really happened, right?


You're not just lying. But if you can prove convincingly that that's what happened, you can get uh now you might


get sanctioned in terms of now you're being ordered to get treatment for your schizophrenia or something like that. You could be ordered to take meds or


whatever. Like there's not no consequence to this, but but you wouldn't be criminally liable because


you were acting in in good faith. Like would to kill someone in self-defense is legal. So there would be no reason that


you would think that was wrong in that situation because the information being given to you was completely fraudulent and you had no way of knowing that it


was fraudulent and you did the right thing in the context of the the fraudulent information. So you're


actually acting correctly like you're acting legally in that case. Um and there just wasn't any way for you to know that you weren't. Uh and so the


lack of knowledge that what you're doing is is wrong is the thing that gets you off. Uh there's there's a variety of


ways that you can use uh that you can't do things like ignorance of the law. There's there exceptions on how they work and stuff. You can go into all of


that, but in terms of free will, that's what we mean is uh are are we get are we acting rationally on the information


available to us or is something interfering with that? Are we being deceived? So like if someone cons you


into doing something, well, you lack free will because you're acting on false information. You're being deceived. So


you're not actually you're not engaging in informed consent in that case because you're being misinformed deliberately


and tricked. Uh so free will means having being able to have informed consent to what you did. Uh and because


of that, that's why you don't need like it wouldn't even not only would it not make sense for there to need libertarian


free will, the sort of magical power free will that defies determinism. Not only would you not need that, but you


actually desperately don't want that because if you had a thing that violated the rules of of deterministic physics,


that means that you could have so if you think like a logical argument, you've got premises and a conclusion. There's only one conclusion. There's no other


thing, right? The premises entail the conclusion. The last thing you want is for something to bump in there and say


you're going to choose the wrong thing. You're going to arrive at a different conclusion than the logical one


because random reasons, right? There's no reason. We're just it's just going to happen. Then that means that your rationality would be destroyed by this


libertarian free will power. Like this this ability to break deterministic physics would break rational thought,


right? So like, so you don't you don't want this sort of libertarian power of free will. That would actually undermine


free will. It would actually take away your free will by by subverting your will and replacing it with something


else randomly that you didn't rationally choose. Right. So um and so I think that's that's the the ultimate answer


that I give to that kind of presentation. Okay. Yeah. So I want to get into that because that's interesting because


people who are against determinism against determinism will say if you have determinism you can't think logically.


They'll use the same argument for that, but we'll get into that. You need determinism to think logically, right? Like you absolutely do. Like


imagine your computer like didn't work deterministically, but would just randomly make decisions like like so so no


program works like everything malfunctions. It's just completely unpredictable. Can't do calculations. It's not reliable. Um the only reason


computers work is because they are deterministic. The only reason, you know, that's it's the uh the funny thing


about like the sort of pseudo AI that people are hyping nowadays is kind of like this because it actually takes


rational thought and throws junk in there at random and that's why it hallucinates. It gets answers wrong. Uh


it's unintelligent, right? It's it's actually anti-intelligent in a way. Uh because it's the very thing that's


that's kind of basically it's a schizophrenic has been driven insane by this uh the way they've organized it,


right? So like you can't you couldn't have free will if you had that kind of system. Um so so that's why I think there people


are thinking in the wrong direction and I think it's mostly people aren't thinking this through and they aren't really aware of the brain


science as to why rational thought exists. like what's needed for rational decision-m like I don't think they


understand physically what's needed for that to happen in any possible universe not just our universe but any universe


for there to be rational thought there has to be certain things including a deterministic computation because that's


the only way to get rational thought um anyway yeah that's that's my uh my


tie rate on that sweet yeah so uh since we just got done proving that if you only have like one


desire and you don't have a desire to do something else you have to give into the only desire Like if I'm not if I'm if


I'm 100% inclined against eating poop and I'm not inclined at all to eat it, I can't eat the poop. But then


even even if you're going even if you have multiple like you can appeal to multiple desires, right? You have multiple operating desires. You can


appeal to different desires and you can generate new desires through persuasion. People can persuade you and you can


persuade yourself. But if you map out what's going on there, that's all deterministic as well, right? Like cuz it's computation. You're


being presented with information being asked to run a computation. You got an input, you got an output. And so that's


how you generate new desires. That's how you abandon old desires. That's how you select between multiple desires. Uh it's


all a physical process and would be in every possible universe because it has to be. There's no other way to like


rationally, sensiently choose or do do any of these things, create or destroy desires or select between desires. You


could not do this without a deterministic computational system. And you would never want to do it without you wouldn't want to get rid of the


deterministic system because that would actually undermine everything that you would want in terms of being able to like make rational decisions.


Okay. So now the second question is is when you have two desires does the greatest one determine a will the will


not the only one? I think I honestly think that the greatest one determines the will. I'll give a quick thought experiment. So I heard of Jonathan


Edwards talking about just you know the greatest mode of determining the will and I was like okay I'm going to do a thought experiment and try to go against


my greatest desire. So I was like, "What's my greatest desire right now?" I was like, "To not hit myself." And so I


was like, "I'm just going to hit myself." And yeah. Yeah. I think we talked about this before. Like this is


it's a tautology, right? Like so like like what you end up doing is obviously you're what you wanted most. So it's


it's self-defining. But if you turn and talk about it in terms of physics, right? So you've got two desires. You're


activating them both. They're both going to build potentials, but the one's potential that's stronger is going to physically cascade over the other one,


right? So like it's gonna it's going to overpower it. There's no way for a weaker electrical signal to overpower a


stronger electrical signal. It's physically impossible, right? Uh so so yeah, there the only way to get one
 
I found (most of) the transcript!

I inadvertently hit “select” before the whole thing was over. Here is what I copied (and no, not going to try to sort this by paragraph and spaces between them. This is sufficient to let me comment on key passages):





lo everyone. This is the vice president of internet infidels, Edward Tameisian. You all know me from my


published paper on the origin of evil and theistic art determinism. And I'm the contributing author of a book that


was released a couple of months ago called uh a drop a reason essays from the secular web. And for the sixth time,


I'm going to be interviewing the prince of all Christ myth theorists, the great and legendary Richard Carrier. And we


have a good list of discussions we're going to have today. and we're going to begin it by talking about whether there's libertarian free will or not.


So, I'm going to go into the description of how people choose and explain how the wheel works and then I'm going to bring


up some objections to libertarian free will and then I'm going to ask Carrier for his input. So, before we begin the


discussion on, you know, whether there's libertarian free will or not, we have to discuss, you know, how it is that people are able to will. Um, I was discussing


with Philip Gop the issue of whether one needs a desire or not. And he actually thought that someone doesn't need a


desire in order to choose. And I thought that was counterintuitive, like unreasonable thinking.


It doesn't even make it easy. Like, how can you choose if you're not interested? So, yeah. So, I'm going to I'll have to prove that one needs an incl. So, I'll


just give a a brief example that proves this. Okay. If I went up to most people and said, "Hey, do you want to eat, you know, a pile of dog waste?" They're


going to be like, "No, I'm not going to do that. That's crazy." And I say, "Hey, even if someone gave you, you know, 5,000 bucks to do it, would you say,


would you say yes to it?" They're going to be like, "No." And I'll be like, "Why?" they're going to be like cuz I'm not that inclined to win. So clearly, you know, you have like a can't factor.


The more you're inclined to something via an internal motivation, the more odds you have of choosing it. The less you're inclined you have, the less


inclined you are. You have less of a motivation to choose it. And it makes sense that when that inclination reaches absolutely zero, you won't be motivated


at all. And you'll you will cease to see the dog waste as a motive and you won't be able to choose at all. Now, here's


the thing. You'll still have the power in your brain, like the um part of your brain that if you accessed it, you could


eat it. But yet, you can't. And why? Because you don't have a motivation. So, actually, even then, you can't choose.


Now, someone might say, "Well, you can't choose. Doesn't this mean there's something wrong with you or you're just an automaton?" I'll say, "No, because


it's not as if the person wants to eat but can't. They physically can. They just don't want to. They're just because


when you see something as truly valous, you can't do it. So, there's nothing wrong with the freedom here cuz the person's still free to do as they


please. they just they're just not motivated. They just don't want to eat the food. So that this is


and you can even give an example of when they would, right? Like when like to save a life or some or for a million


dollars, maybe someone would do it for a million dollars, right? So like so yeah, obviously you can you can overcome uh


that, right? So obviously the capability exists and it really is just a but for desire uh explanation. Um but I think


whenever we're having conversations like this and I don't know what Goff specifically said uh like what he


thought he was talking about but um we have to go to the ontology like when we say desire what do we actually


physically mean like what's going on uh in the brain right so a very very


oversimplifica simplified version of this is that basically there's like synapses uh in which you've got


electrical potentials and chemical interactions and when you that when they


when it piles up enough, it actually becomes a cascade and it it flows, right? And but you have to pile all that


[ __ ] up physically to actually get the the signals to go down and actually move


your hand, move your mouth to say a thing, uh eat the poop or whatever. Like he to make the decision, uh there has to


be this cascade. And it's actually a physical thing that has to be built up. It's a form of computation. It's analog.


It's not digital. It's messy. It's complicated. It can be tricked and it could be an error and like all kinds of things, but it's still a physical thing


that's happening in the brain. And that's what we mean by a desire, right? Yeah. When you have that that


accumulation uh of what what do you call it? Synaptic potential that's able to push through


and lead to the cascade that results in everything else, right? So, um and so


yeah, obviously and it's literally physically impossible to move or make or


do anything without that potential happening. because literally the the circuitry doesn't work. Like there's no signal sent uh to move your hand or


whatever it is that that it ultimately results in. Even if it's just a conceptual idea, I'll eat the poop in concept.


Uh that's still a decision regarding what you're willing to say. So you've got the muscles of your mouth like all


of that stuff has to be activated. And even when it's like if you have Tourett syndrome and you're blurting out things


nonsciously, it's the still there that cascade is still there. It's still happening. It's just that you don't have conscious control of it because those


are different parts of the brain, right? So, so yeah, absolutely you 100% have to


have a desire to do an action, right? Like because otherwise it physically is impossible for you to do the action. And


that's any action. So any choice is an action of some kind, whether it's a choice to say a thing, even a choice to


believe a thing, like even a choice to like wander your mind internally from one fantasy to another or from one, you


know, one model of the future to another. like you're there those these are all physical things that are happening and require these physical


potentials and then those potentials are the desires that's what we're talking about and in psychology uh when you talk


about values right or virtues but they usually talk about them as values values


will be defined you'll see in textbooks in psychology as persistent long-term desires right so like there are desires


that just like almost always in place and that defines um the value you have


so you have these readily create these potentials because that's what having the value means is is you set that. So


to do that like if you're like an animal not a sensient person the same thing is true right um but of course the animal


doesn't have cognitive understanding of what it's choosing right it's it's making choices more intuitively than


anything right uh it has you can talk about it having certain kinds of knowledge and lacking certain kinds of knowledge and things like that but it


doesn't really have the cognitive comprehension of what it's doing right like it's not you know so so so but for


us we do and and that cognitive comprehension again is a physical thing that happens in the brain and it has physical effects


downstream in terms of whether you create or don't create these potentials, these synaptic potentials that result in


the cascade that results in action. So, so when you talk about free will, I mean, for the one thing, yeah,


absolutely action without desire is impossible. It's it's there's always a desire whether you understand that or


whether you're using the word desire in a different way or whatever it is, but in the basic sense of what a desire is, yeah, there always has to be a desire to


cause an action. And then the question is, well, are your desires just predetermined, right? Like you have no control over your desires? That's we


also know is not true because the creation of desires is another cascade potential that can actually set up the


brain to be more favorable, less favorable to creating these potentials in the future. And that's how you build values, right? It's Aristotle was right


about this that you got to habituate values. Uh and and because you're actually building the circuitry in your


brain that actually decides mechanically when you build potentials and when you don't and that would result in action.


So uh so all of this is true, but the thing is is that what gives us free will, what we mean by free will is that


we actually have this rational section of the brain that can monitor all of this. Not all of it. We're not in control of everything that goes on in


our brain. People with Tourette's syndrome, for example, don't have total control, but they have control over a


lot. And so when we're talking about free will, we're talking about what that control module can rationally decide. So


it can actually analyze the situation say based on my rational logical analysis of this thing I'm going to push


my potential you know create a desire to do this right so like the potentials are actually being dictated by the logic


circuits by the logical analysis that's physically going on in the brain and so that's free will the when we when we


lack free will is when someone interferes with that when we've made a decision or we want a particular thing and someone says no you're you're not


going to get that we're going to get in your way and do it or we're going to force you like put a gun to your head and so create a different cascade that


is not the cascade you wanted. You didn't choose that and you would not choose that if you had the ability to not choose it. Uh but they're actually


substituting their will for yours because they're saying I want this thing to happen. You don't want this thing to happen. Well, I'm going to point a gun


at you and tell you I'm going to kill you unless you do the thing. And so really it's the person with the gun's


will that is not the agent who's being threatened. It's not their will. It's technically their will in the sense that


they're choosing not to be shot. Uh but we we acknowledge that that is a violation of freedom, right? It's like


so and that's what we mean by violation of freedom. It's not a question about deterministic physics. It's all about


the question of are you free to make this decision or not which is really a political social reality uh on the


outside end and on the inside end you have the most common example is the insanity defense which a lot of people


don't understand how that works in court. Like most people think that you just clear you just get yourself


declared insane and then you're excused for all actions. And that's not how it works in in court at all. You could be


massively insane. You could have a million mental illnesses, certificates that you have of the mental illnesses and everything completely irrelevant in


court. The only thing they want to know for the insanity of the defense is did you know what you were doing and did you


have the ability to choose not to do it? Like did you do it anyway? Right? And so like an epileptic doesn't have conscious


control over the movements of their body. So they can't like that's not a question. They don't have free will over the movement of their body when they're


having an epileptic epileptic fit. But when you're not having epileptic fit, you do have rational control over your


body. So you so then you can be blamed for the things because really what's being blamed is the module that made the


decision, right? So in epilepsy, that module is not making the decision to have an epileptic fit. So it can't be


blamed for it, right? It didn't do it. But the module, the rational module that's deciding to act when you're free


to act, um it did do it. And so when we're looking for like responsibility, that's what we're looking for. Can did


that module cause it? The the rational module, the thing that actually constitutes you as a person combined


with all the the data and information. So like that's the thing we're looking for. So violation of free will is when


like the epileptic case or more common case is like you take a schizophrenic


who hallucinates that someone's attacking them. They kill them in self-defense and then realize, oh [ __ ]


that was a hallucination. They weren't attacking me all along. that would work as a defense if you could prove that that's what really happened, right?


You're not just lying. But if you can prove convincingly that that's what happened, you can get uh now you might


get sanctioned in terms of now you're being ordered to get treatment for your schizophrenia or something like that. You could be ordered to take meds or


whatever. Like there's not no consequence to this, but but you wouldn't be criminally liable because


you were acting in in good faith. Like would to kill someone in self-defense is legal. So there would be no reason that


you would think that was wrong in that situation because the information being given to you was completely fraudulent and you had no way of knowing that it


was fraudulent and you did the right thing in the context of the the fraudulent information. So you're


actually acting correctly like you're acting legally in that case. Um and there just wasn't any way for you to know that you weren't. Uh and so the


lack of knowledge that what you're doing is is wrong is the thing that gets you off. Uh there's there's a variety of


ways that you can use uh that you can't do things like ignorance of the law. There's there exceptions on how they work and stuff. You can go into all of


that, but in terms of free will, that's what we mean is uh are are we get are we acting rationally on the information


available to us or is something interfering with that? Are we being deceived? So like if someone cons you


into doing something, well, you lack free will because you're acting on false information. You're being deceived. So


you're not actually you're not engaging in informed consent in that case because you're being misinformed deliberately


and tricked. Uh so free will means having being able to have informed consent to what you did. Uh and because


of that, that's why you don't need like it wouldn't even not only would it not make sense for there to need libertarian


free will, the sort of magical power free will that defies determinism. Not only would you not need that, but you


actually desperately don't want that because if you had a thing that violated the rules of of deterministic physics,


that means that you could have so if you think like a logical argument, you've got premises and a conclusion. There's only one conclusion. There's no other


thing, right? The premises entail the conclusion. The last thing you want is for something to bump in there and say


you're going to choose the wrong thing. You're going to arrive at a different conclusion than the logical one


because random reasons, right? There's no reason. We're just it's just going to happen. Then that means that your rationality would be destroyed by this


libertarian free will power. Like this this ability to break deterministic physics would break rational thought,


right? So like, so you don't you don't want this sort of libertarian power of free will. That would actually undermine


free will. It would actually take away your free will by by subverting your will and replacing it with something


else randomly that you didn't rationally choose. Right. So um and so I think that's that's the the ultimate answer


that I give to that kind of presentation. Okay. Yeah. So I want to get into that because that's interesting because


people who are against determinism against determinism will say if you have determinism you can't think logically.


They'll use the same argument for that, but we'll get into that. You need determinism to think logically, right? Like you absolutely do. Like


imagine your computer like didn't work deterministically, but would just randomly make decisions like like so so no


program works like everything malfunctions. It's just completely unpredictable. Can't do calculations. It's not reliable. Um the only reason


computers work is because they are deterministic. The only reason, you know, that's it's the uh the funny thing


about like the sort of pseudo AI that people are hyping nowadays is kind of like this because it actually takes


rational thought and throws junk in there at random and that's why it hallucinates. It gets answers wrong. Uh


it's unintelligent, right? It's it's actually anti-intelligent in a way. Uh because it's the very thing that's


that's kind of basically it's a schizophrenic has been driven insane by this uh the way they've organized it,


right? So like you can't you couldn't have free will if you had that kind of system. Um so so that's why I think there people


are thinking in the wrong direction and I think it's mostly people aren't thinking this through and they aren't really aware of the brain


science as to why rational thought exists. like what's needed for rational decision-m like I don't think they


understand physically what's needed for that to happen in any possible universe not just our universe but any universe


for there to be rational thought there has to be certain things including a deterministic computation because that's


the only way to get rational thought um anyway yeah that's that's my uh my


tie rate on that sweet yeah so uh since we just got done proving that if you only have like one


desire and you don't have a desire to do something else you have to give into the only desire Like if I'm not if I'm if


I'm 100% inclined against eating poop and I'm not inclined at all to eat it, I can't eat the poop. But then


even even if you're going even if you have multiple like you can appeal to multiple desires, right? You have multiple operating desires. You can


appeal to different desires and you can generate new desires through persuasion. People can persuade you and you can


persuade yourself. But if you map out what's going on there, that's all deterministic as well, right? Like cuz it's computation. You're


being presented with information being asked to run a computation. You got an input, you got an output. And so that's


how you generate new desires. That's how you abandon old desires. That's how you select between multiple desires. Uh it's


all a physical process and would be in every possible universe because it has to be. There's no other way to like


rationally, sensiently choose or do do any of these things, create or destroy desires or select between desires. You


could not do this without a deterministic computational system. And you would never want to do it without you wouldn't want to get rid of the


deterministic system because that would actually undermine everything that you would want in terms of being able to like make rational decisions.


Okay. So now the second question is is when you have two desires does the greatest one determine a will the will


not the only one? I think I honestly think that the greatest one determines the will. I'll give a quick thought experiment. So I heard of Jonathan


Edwards talking about just you know the greatest mode of determining the will and I was like okay I'm going to do a thought experiment and try to go against


my greatest desire. So I was like, "What's my greatest desire right now?" I was like, "To not hit myself." And so I


was like, "I'm just going to hit myself." And yeah. Yeah. I think we talked about this before. Like this is


it's a tautology, right? Like so like like what you end up doing is obviously you're what you wanted most. So it's


it's self-defining. But if you turn and talk about it in terms of physics, right? So you've got two desires. You're


activating them both. They're both going to build potentials, but the one's potential that's stronger is going to physically cascade over the other one,


right? So like it's gonna it's going to overpower it. There's no way for a weaker electrical signal to overpower a


stronger electrical signal. It's physically impossible, right? Uh so so yeah, there the only way to get one
Yay!!!
 
he told a jazz musician that he did not write his own composition but hard determinism did
I heard that before. That was his emotional contrarianism as I understand it.
Outside of biology I think Coyne — who also supports Israeli slaughter in Gaza and attacks trans rights — is a total fuckwit
I didn't hear THAT before. That's sad.

Coyne devotes most of his his time to attacking trans rights, DEI, and “wokeism.” He also contributed to a horrible book of essays, which features a contribution by the execrable Jordan Peterson, that attacks “woke” influence on science. It seems, according to him and the book’s other contributors, that progressives are destroying science, not Trump, RFK Jr., and other madmen who are trying to destroy education in its entirety to ensure that we have a population that will reliably vote MAGGOT.
Yeah, see to me this just looks like Calvinist Christianity of the sort explicitly designed to suffocate people's dreams, but rebranded in a way that makes it seem more appealing to atheists.

They just rename their God "necessity" and try to hide it in a neater way.
Yes, most Calvinists in the past would, out of intellectual dishonesty, say God simply ordains all but does not determine any moral evil to happen, even though they believe all that happens occurs of necessity. However, they believe God does determine an elect group to be saved, and that he does this by direct causation!

But, but, I thought since there were secondary causes at stake (like the scriptures and people preaching to the elect, he would just have to be The Final Cause, right Calvinists? Talk about trying to have your own cake and eat it too, so to speak.

After talking with these scums for a while, you eventually figure out that ordained semantically means to casually determine - so this just shows they were using a euphemism all along. Then, they will tell you he is just the Final Cause of all Evil but The Efficient Cause of all truly genuine good actions. They used to claim God was just the Final Cause of sin because of the role of Secondary Causes, which I have just shown does not work (see my previous comment to Pood on this thread, for those who want further details).

Even with 'Secondary Causes' or whatever you describe it as, God is still (and has to be here, as was previously proved by me)
the Efficient Cause of All things, Sin and Good, because he directly created the secondary causes and efficiently caused Adam & Eve & Holy Angels to have inclinations (motivations) in their natures, without which they could not choose (Johnathan Edwards and John Gerstner even had to admit that God caused all of his initial creations desires).

However, Calvinists and Reformed Baptists are different these days: There are more of them that believe that even if God were to be The Efficient Cause of Evil, he would still be infinitely holy and the embodiment of perfect justice!! Excuse me while I vomit in a bucket. This was in page 6 of Calvinism and The Problem of Evil (Amazon Prime). It just sickens me how Calvinists, these days at least, will deny truth and reason to its face just to defend their client (God) from all accusations. They are worse than any non-Christian they have condemned. What days we live in...
Yeah, my own biggest disappointment is in myself, though, for how long it took me to see any of that clearly.

That said, after diving into trying to understand Gnosticism and gnostic-adjacent occultism, I ended up walking away from it with several different concepts of "god", and one of them was the conclusion that many people do consider God to be "the set of all sets".

It took me... A good long time, actually, thinking about this after reading about Russel's Paradox on "Foundations" by Ian Stewart (who also happened to write about half of my undergrad math textbooks), combined with gnosticism, to understand that people were using God in such ways as would allow the consequences of contradictions to appear in logical thought so as to proclaim a very specific "anything" to be true (namely this semi-solipsistic position of the Calvinists).

And it's just facile, because the reason that "The Set of All Sets" is nonsensical is that "all sets" imply that everything across existence exists exactly once as it is in a single structure and only with exactly that structure... But we can trivially see from the existence of identities and symmetries and aperiodic structures that all finite and yes, infinite systems appear infinitely across and through math with infinite variations between them, and that there are unexpressed spaces even between these that we don't even know the first idea of how to access them, or order them, or to discuss them other than in what they aren't.

So it seems trying to think of the whole of all that is possible as a set of any kind, as a static thing, or as a thing at all in some closed way seems doomed to fail.
 
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