Counterfactuals are recondite. You can’t say “if this didn’t happen then that would have happened” because you don’t know everything that might have happened.‘Do you remember—’
‘I have a … very good memory, thank you.’
‘Do you ever wonder what life would have been like if you’d said yes?’ said Ridcully.
‘No.’
‘I suppose we’d have settled down, had children, grandchildren, that sort of thing …’
Granny shrugged. It was the sort of thing romantic idiots said. But there was something in the air tonight …
‘What about the fire?’ she said.
‘What fire?’
‘Swept through our house just after we were married. Killed us both.’
‘What fire? I don’t know anything about any fire?’
Granny turned around.
‘Of course not! It didn’t happen. But the point is, it might have happened. You can’t say “if this didn’t happen then that would have happened” because you don’t know everything that might have happened. You might think something’d be good, but for all you know it could have turned out horrible. You can’t say “If only I’d …” because you could be wishing for anything. The point is, you’ll never know. You’ve gone past. So there’s no use thinking about it. So I don’t.’ — Terry Pratchet
I picked "I don't know" because I don't know the answer. If I knew the answer, I would not have asked the question on this forum. — Truth Seeker
Pretty much. So ↪180 Proof presumes the universe is determinate, then concludes that we cannot make choices:
Unless the universe (of determinant forces and constraints on one) changes too, I don't think so. — Banno
How do you know this? — Truth Seeker
Could anyone have made a different choice in the past than the ones they made? — Truth Seeker
Then who became the criminal? "I" is a rigid designation, picking you out in every possible world, including those in which your nefarious self comes to the fore.if I had become a criminal, the resulting person wouldn't be me — frank
Yep. And the answer (at least in part) is to consider in a bit more detail what you are asking. You can consider how things would have been had you not posted the OP - you would not be reading this post, for one, and might be doing something much more gratifying. In that sense, of course you might have done otherwise than you actually did.I am trying to understand how choices are made and if our choices are inevitable or not. — Truth Seeker
Then who became the criminal? "I" is a rigid designation, picking you out in every possible world, including those in which your nefarious self comes to the fore. — Banno
is a tautology, because you are now identifying yourself as your history, not as frank. All you are saying is that the person who did not become a criminal did not become a criminal.If I'd had a different history, I'd be a different person, maybe closely kin to me, like a cousin. Therefore I can't have a different history. — frank
But you might have done otherwise. — Banno
What determines who chooses what? If the choices are determined by genes, environments, nutrients and experiences, are the choices free? — Truth Seeker
Depends on one's definition of 'free'. A compatibilist would say yes even if physics is fully deterministic, but a compatibilist might have a completely different definition of 'free' than somebody wanting to rationalize a different view.Are we free agents or are our choices determined by variables such as genes, environments, nutrients, and experiences? — Truth Seeker
Your genes influence your general makup (what you grew up to be), but are for the most part not consulted in any way for making a particular decision.If I had the genes of a banana tree instead of my genes, could I have typed these words? I don't think so.
To me, that sounds like 'if nothing was different, then would anything different happen?'. What exactly is different when you say those words? You seem to have left nothing out. What is being swapped here?If I had the genes, environments, nutrients, and experiences that you have, would I not have typed your post and vice versa? — Truth Seeker
This has to do with which interpretation of physics (if any of the known ones) happens to be the case. In some, yes, all inevitable.There are several definitions of 'determined' and several of them need to be not the case for the sort of 'free' that you seem to have in mind. Most non-deterministic interpretations are alternatively fundamentally random, which doesn't allow any more freedom than a non-random interpretation. Rolling dice is a very poor way to make decisions that matter, which is why there are no structures in human physiology that leverage natural randomness. And there very much would be such structures if there was useful information to be found in it. Evolution would not ignore any advantage like that.What I am exploring here is whether our choices are inevitable or not. — Truth Seeker
No idea what that means.I think a better way to think of it is that the real world is run by randomness constrained by deterministic processes. — T Clark
Sure. If your genes were different, you might have acted differently. If your environment were different, you might not have had access to this web site. If you had skipped breakfast, you might have been too tiered to bother posting. That's not to say that even if your genes had been different, you may have acted in the very same way. If your environment had been different, you may have changed it so as to gain access to this site. Had you skipped breakfast, you might nevertheless have still made the OP....determined... — Truth Seeker
if they are determined, then identical choices would result from identical variables. — Banno
I agree. How would I know with 100% certainty if they are determined or not
There's a possible world in which you did not make that OP. — Banno
The OP raises whether or not it's possible to 'change the past' of the actual world (i.e. retroactively making a choice different from the choice that already has been made); imo counterpart choices in 'parallel / possible worlds' are not relevant to the question at hand.Under any nondeterminist interpretation, one 'could have chosen differently', or even might not have faced the choice at all. It also works under some fully deterministic interpretations like MWI where all possible choices are made in some world. — noAxioms
My reply to the OP is consistent with compatibilism – not your strawman.So 180 Proof presumes the universe is determinate, then concludes that we cannot make choices — Banno
Choice itself implies the act of choosing was made by the person and the person's free will.I am not talking about changing the past. What determines who chooses what? If the choices are determined by genes, environments, nutrients and experiences, are the choices free? — Truth Seeker
Banana tree gene is irrelevant premise for your conclusion. It makes no sense at all. There are many other reasons why you typed the post, other than your genes. But most of all, it was your free will which typed your posts.If I had the genes of a banana tree instead of my genes, could I have typed these words? I don't think so. — Truth Seeker
If that is how you read it, well, no. The past is kinda fixed.The OP raises whether or not it's possible to 'change the past' of the actual world ( — 180 Proof
If the universe is of determinant forces and constraints, then it is determinant.Unless the universe (of determinant forces and constraints on one) changes too, I don't think so. — 180 Proof
Banana tree gene is irrelevant premise for your conclusion. It makes no sense at all. There are many other reasons why you typed the post, other than your genes. But most of all, it was your free will which typed your posts. — Corvus
I answered that query as best I could. It makes no sense to ask (if X happened to be not-X, what would happen?). So of course a tree doesn't make the same decisions as a person, but I don't see how that's relevant to the topic.If I had the genes of a banana tree instead of my genes — Truth Seeker
Of course they do. Free choice is not needed at all for that. Common misconception. It is only needed for external responsibility (like responsible to some entity not part of the causal physics), but it is not needed to be held responsible by say my society, which IS part of the universe.I am trying to work out if anyone deserves any credit or blame for their choices.
Because it's not those variables that made the choice, it is how you process them into the chosen selection that matters.If the choices we make are the products of variables we didn't choose e.g. genes, environments, nutrients and experiences, then how can we be credited or blamed for anything?
I didn't read it that way. No explicit mention of retrocausality, only the proposal that it might have possibly evolved differently from some given prior state. That answer is, as I said, a matter of interpretation. BTW, any non-local interpretation allows some retrocausality, but does not allow information to go back. So some occurrence might be a function of some event that has not yet happened (interpretation of delayed choice experiments), but a message cannot be sent to the past by such a mechanism, and to 'change the past' would seem to require the latter ability.The OP raises whether or not it's possible to 'change the past' of the actual world (i.e. retroactively making a choice different from the choice that already has been made) — 180 Proof
It is a different evolution of some same initial state. I find that relevant, but since that person in the other world is arguably not 'you', then 'you' didn't do the other thing. You can't both have chosen both vanilla and chocolate (twist is a third choice, not 'doing otherwise').imo counterpart choices in 'parallel / possible worlds' are not relevant to the question at hand.
Because it's not those variables that made the choice, it is how you process them into the chosen selection that matters. — noAxioms
No humans have banana tree gene. What is the point of telling us that? It is irrelevant point, and there is no logical link for what you are claiming.If I had the genes of a banana tree, instead of my human genes, I would have grown into a banana tree, provided I was in the appropriate environment and received the appropriate nutrients. Since no banana tree is sentient and types in English, it would have been impossible for me to post anything on this forum. — Truth Seeker
Your idea of free will doesn't have boundary or definition, and it is not a correct concept. "genes, environments, nutrients and experiences" are not relevant elements for having free will.What do you mean by free will? My will is certainly not free from my genes, environments, nutrients and experiences. I think my will is both determined and constrained by my genes, environments, nutrients and experiences. — Truth Seeker
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.