lightgigantic said:
Often atheists will launch into attacks on issues of theistically defined free will because they are hopelessly addicted to thinking in reductionist/deterministic paradigms (ie that all of our actions, psychological state of mind etc are determined by an intricate array of electrons etc so morality/reward/punishment/etc are completely relative, etc etc) .
greenberg said:
They are hopelessly addicted to thinking in reductionist/deterministic paradigms? This is an unkind thing to say, at least that. It's like telling a student "You're a basket case! Off with you. You'll never learn."
Quite simply, reductionist/deterministic paradigms are diametrically opposed to transcendental ones. To assume that everything (even things beyond one’s direct perception) conform with the reductionistic/deterministic constitutes a type of fanaticism. Personally I have no problem with reductionism and determinism – it works fine for repairing a car or crossing the street – but I certainly don’t feel that all claims to reality must subscribe to it.
Again: My point is that you said
They are hopelessly addicted to thinking in reductionist/deterministic paradigms. So there is no hope for them? They are souls who are bound to stay in samsara forever, they are souls who cannot change their conditioning / or whose conditioning cannot be changed? That no matter how much they try, no matter how much they might eventually see the error of their ways, they are still going to stay stuck?
Note that for example in Christianity, this is a valid possibility: some Christian doctrines say that after death, one cannot affect anymore whether one will end up in heaven or in hell; so if one ended up in hell, but then changed their mind and still wanted to subject themselves unto God and thus come into heaven, this would then not be possible anymore - so that Christian doctrine.
And then there is the Buddhist doctrine on
icchantikas, also about living beings who are going to stay stuck in samsara forever.
So it's not like what you're suggesting is something completely foreign.
But does Vaishnavism actually contain such a doctrine? About people who are going to forever stay stuck in samsara? Or is there a doctrine that states that some entanglements in material nature are such that one can never become free from them?
I am not sure what exactly you meant in your post, but when someone says to me that I am "hopelessly this or that", then I understand this as them telling me that no matter what I would do -no matter what, including praying, practice, and so on- it would all be for naught. As if all I would touch would turn to stone and nothing could help against that. That I might as well give up. And often, this is precisely what they mean.
We normally identify with our views, so much so that we don't see them as views (and thus as something relative, as something that can change), but instead as "who we really are". So when a person or a person's views are called "hopeless", "a basket case", "hopelessly addicted/lost", this means stating that this - hopeless, a basket case, hopelessly addicted/lost -
is who they really are. As if their souls were somehow crucially different from other souls.
Perhaps you simply meant that reductionism and determinism are paths that do not lead to liberation or true knowledge of self and God. I think this should be clearly stated so. Unless
They are hopelessly addicted to thinking in reductionist/deterministic paradigms is used for the sheer shock value of such a statement, or you are actually stating that there is a doctrine that states that some entanglements in material nature are such that one can never become free from them?
Phenomena in samsara are subject to change and imperfection, and such is also the case with holding views - normally, our attachment to particular views changes over time, gets weaker or stronger, and our views change too, we do learn this or that new thing that affects our views, or the force of oblivion, aging, illness and death do their part in changing our views. So I find it hard to believe that there would be views that one could be "hopelessly addicted to".
Just find some hardcore atheist or determinist, meet with him on his regular Saturday night drinking marathons, and at 2 AM he'll likely tell you many things that are not typical at all for someone who calls himself an atheist or reductionist.