#1182: The question can't "be answered by analysis of that nature of determinism alone" because the question is not solely about determinism. Claiming that determinism alone is enough to answer a question about both determinism and free will is simply begging the question, by not taking into account anything but a foregone conclusion.
Then perhaps
you need to actually explain what it is about free will that relies on the nature of time, that means the question can be not answered through determinism alone? Just a thought. At the moment you haven't.
#1172: Repeating that something is irrelevant does nothing to justify the claim.
#1170: Repeating that something is irrelevant does nothing to justify the claim. And relying solely on determinism is begging the question, by ignoring the part about free will.
I.e. Just because he thinks something is not required to arrive at his preferred answer does not make it irrelevant to any possible alternative. And denying that there may be any alternative conclusion is begging the question.
I think that's the point he's been making with regard your position: he
has stated why he thinks it irrelevant. He has been waiting for you, it seems for quite a while, to show how it is relevant. I can just as easily turn your comments back to you: repeating that something is relevant does nothing to justify the claim.
On what grounds do you hold it to be relevant? I.e. what is it about the specific theories of time one chooses that has an impact on the matter at hand? You haven't answered that. That seems to be what he has been saying to you many times, with you not playing ball.
If anything were to impact what determinism is or does, it would be just as much begging the question as just presuming determinism precludes free will, as a foregone conclusion.
Who is saying it is a foregone conclusion? Unless you mean that it is the logical conclusion? And if it is the logical conclusion... can that be helped? I mean, we could argue that 2+2 doesn't =4, because being 4 is the logical conclusion.
If you honestly think the theory of time one adopts has an impact on the matter, the onus is on you, and has remained on you since you first raised it, to explain and show why it is. It is not on anyone else to show that it is not relevant.
No, the nature of time both does not alter what determinism is or does and does effect where in time the causal input exist.
Sorry, you're saying that the the nature of time affects where in time the causal input exists? How so? If A is the cause of B, in
all theories surely A is perceived to happen prior to B. Whether A actually exists when B occurs is not an issue for determinism. It simply means that A leads to B, and always leads to B.
A deterministic system only requires there be no randomness involved in the evolution of future states, and causal determinism only requires that the input at a given time determine the results thereafter. The theories of time do not introduce any randomness, and they do affect the "given time" of the causal input. If there is causal input of the present, unaccounted for by the past alone, that is crucial to an intellectually honest inquiry into the possibility for free will (which acts in the present) in such a system.
The bold is mine, clearly, but where do you get the idea that the causal input for the present can not be accounted for by the past alone? Nothing within determinism allows for it. Determinism: "
the idea that every event is necessitated by antecedent events and conditions together with the laws of nature." Again, bolding mine. Note that this means that every event is wholly determined by events prior to the event in question. I.e. there is no "unaccounted for by the past alone". That is your misconception of determinism.
Sure, if there is a causal input that is unaccounted for by the past alone, you might be on to something, but here the universe is assumed to be deterministic, and the deterministic universe is one where every effect is
wholly determined by antecedant causes. There is simply no space for "unaccounted for by the past alone". That notion is mutually exclusive to determinism. If you disagree with that then it might explain much of your disagreement with Baldeee, but it is one you would seem to be on the wrong side of.
Now, whether you think that this means that he, or I, or anyone who follows the argument, is simply begging the question, is to assume that, as has been stated previously, concluding that Socrates is mortal is to beg the question.
If you have a genuine interest in engaging the theories of time, instead of just dismissing them out of hand, I'd be happy to reiterate how they are relevant (which I presume you've missed).
I'm all ears. I've followed the thread thus far and, honestly, have yet to see how they are relevant, although given what I see as your misconception of determinism, I can see how you might think you have explained their relevance.
But we're not talking only about determinism and time; we're also analyzing free will (if we're not just begging the question). The question involves both X (determinism) and Z (free will). While I'm sure Baldeee can arrive at his preferred conclusion without seriously considering Y, any outright denial of Z being relevant is begging the question.
No, it's not. At least once you had agreed that the nature of determinism is not altered by the theories. His position, as stated, was that it was that nature alone that can answer the question. Sure, he undoubtedly has a notion of "free will" that he's working with, but I'm guessing that his argument is that if the result of all our "choices" are set in stone then all choice, and free will in general, is a useful illusion but an illusion nonetheless. Now, if one defines free will as the process of weighing up inputs and producing an output, then that works just as well for any and every automated switch. A thermostat, for example. More complex, yes, but the same in principle. And if that is all one considers freewill to be, then maybe that is where you should focus your attention? Because as it is, this sidetrack into the theory of time seems, as he has repeatedly advised, irrelevant.
X requires Y (time), and is critical to having any consensus on the definition of X.
You're slipping in your language, though. Y is not
time, but the
theory of time - specifically the ontological nature of time: which part of the past, present, and future actually exists. It is surely sufficient for determinism that there is the perceived passage of time. It doesn't require the past to exist. It doesn't require the future to exist. What is it about the
existence of the past or future that affects the answer to the question here? That is what you're not supplying, or at least haven't supplied thus far.
Z, operating only in the present, is also crucially involved with Y. One doesn't need to alter X to still require Y to establish the details of X pertinent to Z.
If Z only operates in the present, and as per determinism the present is wholly determined by antecedant causes (i.e. the past), then whether or not the past now actually exists, and whether the future now exists or not, would seem to be irrelevant. The only thing that would be relevant would, I agree, be Z (free will) and X (determinism). Where does Y (theory of time) come in to it? Do you see Y (the theory of time) as being relevant to what free will is, for example. Because if so then you really do need to express that. Is that what you think, that the theory of time impacts what free will is? Are some concepts of free will only possible with some theories of time, perhaps?
If that's not satisfactory reason to simply engage with Y, I'll just accept that you're fine with begging the question too.
Sure, you can simply conclude that anyone who doesn't agree with you, or accept what you're saying, is begging the question, or you can try to actually detail why you think the theory of time is relevant.
No one offered anything that took determinism "off the table". That's Baldeee's straw man.
Maybe it is. I'm just explaining to you why what he said does not seem contradictory.
And if you altered determinism, in any way that made it the least bit indetermined, that would be irrelevant.
Agreed.
Presuming that theories of time might do so is, again, Baldeee's own straw man. And demanding that theories of time do so, in order to be relevant, is plainly contradictory to not diminishing determinism. If you can't see that, I truly can't help you.
He wasn't "demanding that the theories of time do so, in order to be relevant", but was saying that the only way they could be relevant is if you somehow showed they affected what it meant something to be deterministic, while remaining deterministic. His argument is clearly that if it doesn't affect determinism, and if he can answer the question through determinism alone (given whatever notion of free will he has assumed) then the theory of time really isn't relevant. That is not contradictory. And if
you can't see that then I truly can't help you.
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