people have been trying to prove that god exists despite the existence of purposeless suffering.
not too hard really. all you have to do is tweak god's attributes a bit to fit observable reality. an omnipotent, but amoral, god would probably be sufficient, but I haven't drilled deep enough on this idea to see if it requires other tweaks to work. essentially, all of empirical science could be interpreted as an inquiry into god's actual nature, which can only be understood in light of a true understanding his creation.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Friday, 10 March 2017 21:24 (nine years ago)
theodicy doesn't really bother me so much bc it seems to me like an internally consistent infinite creator would necessarily have to encompass both good and evil being the creator of both. a rabbi in high school once told me that everything god does it good because goodness is a trait higher than god. i was like "woah check yourself there i'm pretty sure that's insane."
― Mordy, Friday, 10 March 2017 21:25 (nine years ago)
turtles all the way up
― increasingly bonkers (rushomancy), Friday, 10 March 2017 21:25 (nine years ago)
lol
― Οὖτις, Friday, 10 March 2017 21:27 (nine years ago)
it seems to me that OT narratives make no sense without a concept of free will and that sin and punishment in particular make no sense without such an idea. for example take a look at Exodus 9:12 which has inspired an entire literature on the question of why Pharaoh was punished if God intervened in his free will. and particularly consider that the passage only makes sense within a context where free will is assumed.― Mordy, Friday, March 10, 2017 11:55 AM (one hour ago)
― Mordy, Friday, March 10, 2017 11:55 AM (one hour ago)
I don't think this is true at all. Rather, the OT concept of sin strikes me as similar to that of social shame. It (sin) attaches itself to people or groups as a result of wrong-doing like a kind of metaphysical stain. This stain, if sufficiently large, can only be erased by spilling the blood of the sinner (or some acceptable substitute, e.g. scapegoat).
Of course, there's anger on the part of those wronged (e.g., God) as well as desire to punish the sinner, but these things don't necessarily depend on a belief in free will. Like the social "stain" of sin itself, feelings of loss, shame, outrage and desire for redress and can just fine exist without that.
This kind of impersonal, mechanical view of sin as something that is called into being by human action - and not that which motivates human action - makes sense of Christ's sacrifice. His spilled blood (since someone's blood is needed) washes away all sin forever. Not the sin that grows in human hearts, but the sin that blights communities, demands the slitting of throats, and calls down the lord's judgment.
― Not raving but drooling (contenderizer), Friday, 10 March 2017 21:37 (nine years ago)
Finally encountered a less versified source of the famous Epicurus quote, from Lactantius's On the Anger of God
God, he says, either wishes to take away evils, and is unable; or He is able, and is unwilling; or He is neither willing nor able, or He is both willing and able. If He is willing and is unable, He is feeble, which is not in accordance with the character of God; if He is able and unwilling, He is envious, which is equally at variance with God; if He is neither willing nor able, He is both envious and feeble, and therefore not God; if He is both willing and able, which alone is suitable to God, from what source then are evils?
― Sanpaku, Friday, 10 March 2017 21:39 (nine years ago)
I don't think you can read that into that passage. The OT distinguishes between times that Pharoah hardened his own heart and God heartened his heart. I think that necessarily implies that the earlier times were free will and the later times were not. xp
― Mordy, Friday, 10 March 2017 21:40 (nine years ago)
if He is able and unwilling, He is envious, which is equally at variance with God;
weakest link here imo
if He is able and unwilling, He is envious, which is equally at variance with God
probably a translation issue, but that "envious" makes no sense to me. Of whom or of what? And why?
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Friday, 10 March 2017 21:42 (nine years ago)
I'm guessing the idea behind the "envious" would be that God is being spiteful, because the essence of evil is that it is not merely a bad thing, but wrong, unjust and undeserved. God envies the excellence of his innocent victims and deliberately brings ruin upon them out of his envy and spite. Hmmm.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Friday, 10 March 2017 21:51 (nine years ago)
lot of assumptions being made there about the nature and character of god and the reasons for his decisions
― Mordy, Friday, 10 March 2017 21:52 (nine years ago)
The envious there is invidus in the original, with the latin dictionary defs:
1) envious2) hostile, inimical
― Sanpaku, Friday, 10 March 2017 21:52 (nine years ago)
Again, we don't have the surviving text in the original Greek. Kind of odd that Lactantius didn't use malus (malevolent) or pravus (crooked, wicked).
― Sanpaku, Friday, 10 March 2017 21:57 (nine years ago)
Having recently read Lucretius, the 'final answer' Epicurus offered was simply that after creating the world, the gods retreated to a distance and felt indifferent toward it, as a child might wind up a toy, set it down, walk off, and not care if it ran into something and broke.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Friday, 10 March 2017 21:59 (nine years ago)
Ugh do any of youse have the free will to just not
― brat_stuntin (darraghmac), Friday, 10 March 2017 22:03 (nine years ago)
that seems to be a subject of dispute
― Mordy, Friday, 10 March 2017 22:11 (nine years ago)
Ya it was by way of a deep and srs query
― brat_stuntin (darraghmac), Friday, 10 March 2017 22:13 (nine years ago)
highly ironic that God is one of the few beings not allowed to have a free will of His own.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 10 March 2017 22:32 (nine years ago)
hard to be a god iirc
― Οὖτις, Friday, 10 March 2017 22:34 (nine years ago)
he really should have just not created the universe. then there would have been no suffering! instead he fucks up, constantly. lol what an idiot
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 10 March 2017 22:35 (nine years ago)
Let's get God's brain under an fMRI and find out.
― jmm, Friday, 10 March 2017 22:38 (nine years ago)
oh jeez that's more than i thought i'd have to read (NOT REALLY)
anyway what Wittgenstein didn't say about what would it look like if the Earth went round the Sun
― snappy baritone (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 11 March 2017 00:40 (nine years ago)
I don't find determinism terrifying, I just accept it. it has no bearing on the decisions I make or how I behave tbh, I just consider it a fact.
Qualified like this, what you've got there is quite a particular form of acceptance, though, right?
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Saturday, 11 March 2017 01:22 (nine years ago)
The thread really went in a different direction for some time, but if anyone was still wondering about modern science and implications on free will and determinism, I think Karen Barad's chapter on 'Agential Realism' is very good. Very pragmatic, really. Using quantum mechanics specifically.
― Frederik B, Saturday, 11 March 2017 01:36 (nine years ago)
No better excuse for the existence of a Dawkins than that we have to spend this many calories evaluating what's the dumbest argument Epicurus came up with that one time
― El Tomboto, Saturday, 11 March 2017 03:43 (nine years ago)
Don't talk smack about Epicurus. He was closer to modern scientific ideas of physics than anyone else who lived before Isaac Newton.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Saturday, 11 March 2017 04:14 (nine years ago)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinamen
Fascinating!
― El Tomboto, Saturday, 11 March 2017 14:39 (nine years ago)
This is an interesting lecture by Derk Pereboom covering a bunch of the positions: https://youtu.be/bObzpWrhH-Q
I think I'm basically on Pereboom's side (which he calls 'Spinozist'), although I'm definitely not familiar with all of the moves for and against compatibilism. But for me there's a basic appeal in denying free will in the possibility of revising a lot of our ideas of human nature, our relation to the world, and our moral concepts, retributive punishment first of all.
― jmm, Saturday, 11 March 2017 14:59 (nine years ago)
don't see how "purposeless suffering" disproves God in any way. humans are capable of inflicting purposeless suffering. if God can't do the same then he's less powerful than a human. i find many atheist arguments against a God fail when you ask "Can a human do this?" this idea that he is only perfect and only good and would never show up late to work is silly. God's a fuckup like the rest of us, and i find that cosmically funny and sympathetic.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 11 March 2017 16:44 (nine years ago)
also "trying to prove that god exists" seems like the biggest waste of time. religion and belief is an experience that is expressed - not proved - through these forms.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 11 March 2017 16:52 (nine years ago)
Without the concept of free will, people are just animals, beings with no moral integrity, no claim to rights of any kind. If you think this perception would make us kinder -- for instance, by erasing the desire for retribution, or the practice of stigmatizing people for their choices -- just look at the way we treat animals. If your concern is destigmatizing conditions like addiction, just think about what it would be like to be an addict and feel like you have NO control over your actions, even with help. Faith in free will, even if it needs assistance from a "higher power" or whatever, is a source of hope. Deterministic materialism by contrast is a kind of mental prison.
This isn't to say free will definitely exists, but some version of it -- not an exaggerated Randian one that denies society but something that preserves the cocnepts of freedom and responsibility -- is just absolutely essential for people to live in our society. (Maybe some older collectivist societies could do without it, idk about them.)
― Treeship, Saturday, 11 March 2017 16:59 (nine years ago)
"Rights of any kind" = rights beyond the right to avoid pain. Any claim to autonomy. Sorry it was unclear.
― Treeship, Saturday, 11 March 2017 17:02 (nine years ago)
I have never understood the focus on the free will debate, which seems like a tangent from the core issue of accounting for conscious thought & self-awareness. I'm not really clear in what sense they can be illusory, but if that were the case it would undermine the way everyone I know thinks about themselves and the world. I suspect instead the whole issue is largely irrelevant and that the language required to explain consciousness is incommensurable with the way ppl think about their lives, just as it doesn't make a big difference to a chef how an onion has evolved
― ogmor, Saturday, 11 March 2017 17:34 (nine years ago)
otm
― Frederik B, Saturday, 11 March 2017 17:46 (nine years ago)
But for me there's a basic appeal in denying free will in the possibility of revising a lot of our ideas of human nature, our relation to the world, and our moral concepts, retributive punishment first of all.
Okay, I can see this. Definitely a good idea always to include the question, how much responsibility someone has for their actions; not to assume that everyone makes their own choices all the time. Especially when talking about addiction, also when talking about poverty. Or in a general sense when trying to make sense of people's actions.
But adding to treeship's concerns about determinism, which I think are pretty interesting, my suspicion is about how far we can expect real people to follow through the implications of determinism, and actually get around to adopting the more charitable attitude to other people that it implies.
For example look at those people who adopt 'evolutionary psychology' (which is one form of determinism) and use it to excuse rape. Determinism (okay, perhaps as reified mantra, rather than as philosophy) is easily instrumentalised.
Given how easy it would be, I'm not sure how we'd avoid the attitude of resignation in the face of fate (leave the addicts and the impoverished to their lot; or, let big people do whatever they feel like to little people). Having said that, strands of Hinduism and Buddhism seem to be able to combine an extremely bleak fatalistic outlook with compassion, somehow, and like, I've actually encountered real Hindu people who really acted out this compassion, so ... ?
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Saturday, 11 March 2017 18:09 (nine years ago)
xp: A central concept of Buddhism is no self, that there is no permanent soul in living beings, related to their concept of dependent arising, that all things, including volitional thoughts, arise from others. In some secular interpretations (and possibly the original for of Siddhartha's day), its all fairly compatible with modern neuroscience, and certainly with an absence of free will. And yet, Buddhists have perhaps the best record among religions, remarkably clean of inquisitions, pogroms, religious wars, burning of books, and yes, treatment of non-human animals. I think their record indicates we don't need moral judgement of free actors in order to have good lives. We need compassion towards others and measured doubt in all things. And the recognition that all are subject to unsatisfactory environments, health, and thoughts that aren't entirely in their control contributes to both.
Also, as an addict in long-term recovery, I found the modern scientific descriptions of addiction, all the dopamine releases at the nucleus accumbens etc., liberating. I couldn't be expected to voluntarily stop drinking once started, or avoid temptation if I spent my time perusing the liquor aisle. To the extent that I have control, its my role is to arrange my life so those precipitating situations don't occur, because I won't have the will to stop myself. I'm willing to accept that on a moment to moment basis, I'm not free, but perhaps on longer timespans, some part of me, which I'm unconscious of, have an influence on my adaptive subconscience. It takes just takes time, not willpower.
― Sanpaku, Saturday, 11 March 2017 18:12 (nine years ago)
Without the concept of free will, people are just animals, beings with no moral integrity, no claim to rights of any kind. ― Treeship, Saturday, March 11, 2017 8:59 AM (one hour ago)
― Treeship, Saturday, March 11, 2017 8:59 AM (one hour ago)
The fourth point doesn't follow from the first three. Our belief that humans possess "certain inalienable rights" isn't grounded in anything substantial, so far as i can see, and wouldn't necessarily be eroded by the denial of free will, individual moral culpability, etc.
― Not raving but drooling (contenderizer), Saturday, 11 March 2017 18:22 (nine years ago)
Oh yeah and on this one from upthread:
The problem of suffering always seems a bit ... dunno, to me, because it seems to imply that if I, as a human, experience an event as suffering, then that event is suffering. But the tapeworm (for example) that lives in my guts and parasites off me, while that's awful for me, doesn't experience it as suffering, probably as the opposite. Likewise if I get eaten by dogs or whatever, they're having a great time. And of course, here I am, wearing part of a dead cow for comfort and eating other parts for sustenance. Dunno.
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Saturday, 11 March 2017 18:27 (nine years ago)
To the extent that I have control, its my role is to arrange my life so those precipitating situations don't occur, because I won't have the will to stop myself. I'm willing to accept that on a moment to moment basis, I'm not free, but perhaps on longer timespans, some part of me, which I'm unconscious of, have an influence on my adaptive subconscience. It takes just takes time, not willpower.
i think this constitutes a belief in free will, just one that is more circumscribed than most people in the west might believe in. i don't think that the buddhist denial of the "self" is a denial of the will, either, really; making the choice to meditate, to try to forge a more productive relationship with thoughts that are not in one's control, is an exercise of the will. granted, i could be wrong because i don't understand buddhism as well as you do, but to the extent that i am familiar with these kinds of ideas, i don't think that align with determinism, which is a perspective that i think -- if taken seriously -- would be totally at odds with how human beings experience their consciousness.
― Treeship, Saturday, 11 March 2017 18:58 (nine years ago)
Free will has its own thread where the ilxor hivemind settled this question for all time. It was inevitable.
― a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Saturday, 11 March 2017 19:45 (nine years ago)
Ogmor otm ppl who like to talk about free will always pretend they've been asked something about free will listen yacuncha can u fix my boiler or not
― brat_stuntin (darraghmac), Saturday, 11 March 2017 19:48 (nine years ago)
Thought experiment:
Scientists invent a working teleportation device. the device scans you, beeps three times, then instantaneously vaporizes your cells and within the same instant perfectly reconstitutes them in another location.
you walk into one teleportation portal with red walls, hear beep beep beep, and then your body is teleported to another portal with blue walls.
do you ever see the blue walls?
would you ever step foot into such a machine? if not, why not?
― flopson, Saturday, 11 March 2017 20:07 (nine years ago)
nah, because it wouldn't be me, obv
thought koan? what is the self controlling in self-control?
― snappy baritone (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 11 March 2017 20:11 (nine years ago)
are instants a thing?
― ogmor, Saturday, 11 March 2017 20:11 (nine years ago)
your self is destroying possible future selves obv
― ogmor, Saturday, 11 March 2017 20:12 (nine years ago)
can you specify which question you are answering? also, do you believe in a materialist basis for consciousness? also, why is "it wouldn't be me" "obv" to you? are you the same person when you wake up as when you go to sleep?
― flopson, Saturday, 11 March 2017 20:12 (nine years ago)
I'm all for refilming The Prestige as a Star Trek prequel. So many dead Shatners.
― Sanpaku, Saturday, 11 March 2017 20:13 (nine years ago)
lol ok i know yall are using "obv" as a rhetorical flourish but NOTHING IS OBVIOUS TO ME wrt these questions
― flopson, Saturday, 11 March 2017 20:14 (nine years ago)
thought experiment:
it is the year 2017 and someone asks 'you' to try a thought experiment, are you free to say yes? will it be worthwhile? how can either the person who began reading this post or the one who will finish reading it be sure?
― ogmor, Saturday, 11 March 2017 20:16 (nine years ago)
― ogmor, Saturday, March 11, 2017 3:11 PM (three minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
any interval of time shorter than the frequency at which your consciousness can process info (time it would take for light to travel a centimetre, say) would do (i think)
― flopson, Saturday, 11 March 2017 20:17 (nine years ago)