Determinism

Okay, but, in my dreams, experiences seem no less real to me “in the dream” than they do if I were to have a nearly identical experience in my waking hours. It’s not like I keep pausing in the dream in order to remind myself that it is just a dream.

But the “experience” is wholly manufactured by my brain while I lay sleeping. It’s not really being experienced by me at all other than in the dream reality. Not unlike the quandaries posed in the film Inception: psychologytoday.com/us/blog … just-dream

So, how are the two realities/experiences to be understood given either a determined or autonomous universe?

Again, the assumption being that the things you are interested in in your waking reality are qualitatively different from the things you are interested in in your dream reality. Why? Because you assume in turn that your interests in the waking reality are qualitatively different.

That your waking reality interests are necessarily the embodiment of free will. Nature is not compelling you to think and feel this however because, well, you just know that it isn’t.

Meanwhile, some scientists aren’t so sure: blogs.scientificamerican.com/mi … free-will/

“What Neuroscience Says about Free Will”
We’re convinced that it exists, but new research suggests it might be nothing more than a trick the brain plays on itself

Just not your brain, right?

That may be true for you but the dreams of others can have elements within them that would not be possible in real life
Although regardless of what happens within a dream it is taken to be nonetheless real by the one dreaming it at the time

There might actually be a connection in that what one dreams is not necessarily entirely random and therefore unrelated to ones own life
Because apparently some dreams are the subconscious mind trying to articulate what the conscious mind either cannot or will not address

The brain is creating these truly surreal interactions, but it’s not like we are reminding ourselves in the dreams that the reality is being wholly manufactured by the brain.

When those more bizarre dreams occur for me, the reality in the dream is embraced by me no less than the reality that I encounter in my waking hours.

That’s the mystery of course. Explaining reality/“reality” here given the evolution of mindless matter into actual human consciousness.

After all, that in and of itself seems rather mind-boggling to some of us.

A video taken from peacegirl’s New Discovery thread:

youtu.be/T3JzcCviNDk

This is precisely the sort of thinking that continues to elude me in the discussion of determinism.

He seems to be arguing that, in the context of death, it becomes all that more important to live out each and every individual “now” fully. In other words, don’t choose to do things that are superficial. Choose instead to live your life to the fullest. Choose behaviors that are meaningful and challenging.

Yet how, in a determined universe, was he not compelled himself to make this video? How are any of the things that any of us choose not completely and necessarily aligned with the laws of matter?

Is this argument supposed to reflect a “compatibilist” frame of mind?

He delves into the science involved here:

“The truth is that ‘now’ is not even well-defined as a matter of neurology because we know that inputs to the brain come at different moments and that consciousness is built upon layers of inputs whose timing have to be different. Our conscious awareness of the present moment is in some relevant sense already a memory. But as a matter of conscious experience the reality of your life is always now.”

my emphasis

The knowledge of this he claims is what liberates you. And this knowledge is required if you want to be happy.

Again, what am I missing? Do we or do we not have the capacity to opt freely here? To, of our own volition, self-consciously choose to pursue or to accept this knowledge in order to freely enrich our lives in order to freely embrace happiness?

How does the science he cites demonstrate it conclusively one way or the other?

And how on earth does peacegirl then demonstrate in turn how, in “choosing” to embrace the author’s new discovery [sans free will], happiness in our own “progressive future” is a given?

My own dreams in particular. Nine out of ten will revolve around a relative handful of important experiences in my life: my summers in Miners Mill, my college years, my years as a political activist, my 27 years employed by one company, family dreams.

But here’s the thing that boggles my mind. Almost no dreams at all about my years as a Christian. Or my youth in Baltimore. Or, most inexplicable of all, my Army years. Especially the year I spent in Vietnam! Easily some of the most traumatic experiences I had ever had.

But almost no dreams!

And all of this is being “decided” by my brain matter. A brain that somehow intertwines my conscious waking hours experiences with those subconscious and unconscious components of “I” that I barely understand and have little or no control over.

And then those here who actually claim that what they think they know about their own “I” here, is on considerably more solid ground.

And, indeed, in merely believing it that makes it so.

After all, it’s the things that we believe that precipitate the things that we do that then generate actual consequences. For ourselves and others.

howtobeastoic.wordpress.com/2017/03/30/chrysippus-cylinder-agency-in-a-material-universe/

Given the manner in which I have come to understand determinism “in my head” “here and now”, the Stoics back then, no less than the author above, no less than me typing these words, no less than and you reading them, are all inherently/necessarily in sync with the laws of matter.

And so…

Nothing is either right or wrong, reasonable or unreasonable [then or now] if everything is only as it ever could have been in the past, as it can be now in the present or as it will be in the future.

So far as I know, we do not know enough about cause and effect going back to an understanding of existence itself, to make a comprehensive distinction between the nature of cubes and cylinders and human brains.

The judgments made by conscious minds may well be just another manifestation of matter having evolved into brains entirely in sync with the laws that that compel matter having evolved into cubes and cylinders.

Again, the assumption here seems to be that the policeman’s character and judgment somehow reflect “internal” “choices” that “transcend” the laws of matter in a way that the matter in cylinder and the cube are oblivious to.

Now, this might be true if somehow it can be demonstrated that, say, God exists to intercede here with one of His creations [us]. Or that science has finally come to understand in its totality how the human brain is in fact able to embody this:

“Up to us” even though what we think, feel, say and do are still wholly in sync with the laws of matter.

And how did Epictetus go about demonstrating this? These “internal” aspects of “I”. What actual empirical proof did he have that the brain functions such that the distinction regarding control can reconcile “no free will” with “up to us”.

Chemically, neurologically, materially, how does that work in the brain to distinguish the psychological illusion of free will from the assumption that ontologically nature compels all aspects of “I”?

Instead, we get only more “general descriptions” of all this in a “world of words”:

In other words, how “deeply metaphysical” is the most comprehensive explanation and the final truth behind the free will/determinism debate?

Did you get anything out of that post?

No new ideas? No interesting ways to look at the subject? No new avenues of exploration and inquiry?

Nothing?

All I can do is react to it from my own perspective. The manner in which I view determinism “here and now”. The points being raised may well be more sophisticated than my own. But I can’t just “will” myself to grasp that and then reconfigure the points I made in order to reflect what I should have learned.

All the while still more convinced that my reaction was compelled by nature more than as a reflection of a “free will” I have no capacity to actually pin down.

Really, what did the Stoics know about the human brain back then…compared to what neuroscientists today have learned about it?

The short answer was “No, I didn’t get anything out of it”.

It has nothing to do with “free will”. In a deterministic system, the entity (you, me, a black box, a cylinder) is exposed to a multitude of inputs. It ignores some and it processes some. Then it acts on the results of the processing.

For example, when a person leaves work, gets on a bus, gets off the bus and walks home … he sees, hears, smells and feels trillions of things. He might overhear someone say that “the seawater was very warm today” which may prompt him to decide to go to the beach the following day. Thus his actions change as a result of a random input.

Saying that he has to have “free will” in order to decide to go to the beach or that he has no choice but to go to the beach, completely ignores the process that we witness happening in us and in other people.

By that logic, I guess it’s pointless to read anything written prior to 1989 when the internet was “invented”. Prior to that, people were a knuckle-dragging morons who didn’t know or understand anything.

Actually you can understand human psychology and behavior without knowing much about the brain. Just like you can live, learn and prosper without knowing much about your body. Or drive a car without knowing how it works beyond understanding the cause and effect of the controls.

To answer your question … The Stoics probably know very little about the brain but they knew a lot about being human.

Unlikely. Nobody says ‘the seawater was very warm today’ unless they’re a marine biologist or at least a chemist. Ordinary folks just say ‘the water’. Now there are roughly three marine biologists and four chemists per every four hundred people, which drastically reduces the chances of the protagonist passing one on the way home.

Were you aware of this when you wrote that, or are you just trying to be difficult?

Yet another fascinating conjecture regarding just how mind-boggling human “reality”/reality may well be:

nytimes.com/2019/08/10/opin … e=Homepage

This is typical of you in retort mode. I try to explain myself but that’s not the reaction you are looking for. Or are demanding. Instead, I have to agree with you that had I taken the “chrysippus-cylinder-agency-in-a-material-universe” argument seriously, I would have gotten, say, what you got out of it?

Again, depending entirely on how someone has come to understand – given some measure of free will – the meaning of “ignoring” here. From my frame of mind, determinism subsumes all matter in a future that unfolds only as it ever could have. The multitude of inputs, whether pertaining to me, you, a black box or a cylinder, are all inherently, necessarily embodied in the laws of matter.

We act and we ignore differently from the box and the cylinder. How? In that we consciously “choose” to. But that is only a manifestation of matter having evolved into a human brain that is not yet fully understood by science. There may be an element of actual volition embedded in the chemical and neurological interactions that unfold in our brain matter. And, sure, it may be traced back to one or another God; or to one or another understanding of living matter itself that makes it profoundly – qualitatively – different from the mindless matter in the black box and the cylinder.

Okay, you tell us what that is. Demonstrate it to us such that there can be no doubt whatsoever that human beings are able to freely opt for one set of behaviors rather than another.

Instead we get this:

In other words, we are simply to assume that the seqjuence of choices made by the man in this example, like the sequence of choices made by you to bring it to our attention, “proves” that how you understand all of this is more rational than the way I have come to understand it.

But: How does this demonstrate that what appears to you here to be random inputs really are random? Why, instead, can it not be argued that this is but an illusion of randomness. That all of these inputs are intertwined wholly in sync with the laws of matter.

We could be watching a movie of a man leaving work, getting on a bus, going off the bus, walking home, etc… These acts aren’t random if they are entirely scripted. Right? Well, why can’t it be argumed that nature itself is the director here. Only we have no idea how that came to be because we have no kidea how to understand nature going back to existence itself.

Let alone, teleologically, figuring out if there is any meaning or purpose “behind” what nature and its laws entail. Instead, that’s where your God comes in. Assuming of course that you came to understand God as you do freely, of your own volition, and in the manner in which you understand the meaning of that.

Logic? It’s just common sense that the Stoic’s understanding of a functioning human brain was considerbly less than our understanding today.

Note to others:

What on earth is he trying to suggest here about the internet? There is what was known about computer technology before 1989 and after.

On the other hand, image taking a trip in the Way-Back Machine and explaining the internet to the Stoics. Assuming some measure of human autonomy and/or volition and/or free will of course.

If you actually do believe that one can understand human psychology without first having a comprehensive understanding of the human brain – compelled or not – I have no illusions about ever changing your mind.

Right, like what they knew about being human was enough for them to demonstrate definitively that what they knew was not wholly compelled by the laws of nature. Like these laws were different for them back then.

You don’t need to explain yourself yet again. I have read that same explanation dozens of times. I understood it on a previous reading and my memory is not so bad that I forgot it.

You don’t have to agree with it at all. You can vehemently disagree. But I would like to see some evidence that you actually thought about before you disagreed.

In all the thousands of posts, that have been directed towards you and you have responded to, I don’t recall that you ever thought that an idea had any merit and that it caused you to think, research, and analyze.

IOW, you never seem to respond : “That’s an interesting idea. I had not thought of that. Let me think about it for a while. No, after much reflection, I believe the flaw lies in this part of the argument.”

I don’t see how I can demonstrate “that human beings are able to freely opt for one set of behaviors rather than another” when that’s not even my point of view. I’m not saying that there is anything “profoundly – qualitatively – different”.

You don’t understand my position even after all these posts.

No. I’m saying that reducing all human decisions and actions to being “compelled by natural laws” is a lame and ineffective way of describing humans. It’s dumbing it down too much.

Sure but you don’t need to understand the functioning of the human brain if you take a black box approach.

I’m suggesting something about you … that you sound like one of those people who think that everyone in the past was an idiot without understanding of anything.

You don’t need to understand atomic structure, or the existence of existence, in order to build a cathedral in the Middle Ages. You need a good understanding of how stone and wood behave.

A misrepresentation of the Stoic position. I guess you only skimmed the article.

So can I briefly interrupt to ask how many of the 30 most recent posters on this board don’t believe in determinism?

I’m agnostic.

This was an extremely clear explanation of what you meant and what was frustrating (or disrespectful) and what was missing.

I’m supersonic.

Well, if we know you’re velocity you’re location can’t be determined, re:Heisenberg.