there is of course still a necessity for punishment as a deterrent — PeterPants
A note on what i mean by responsibility: people are not ultimately responsible for their actions, but we must act responsible, and hold each other responsible, for practical reasons. While still recognizing intellectually that we are not the arbiters of who we are, and as such things like hatred, vengeance etc, make no sense. — PeterPants
This argument is a moral argument, not necessarily a pragmatic one, as i mentioned above, there is of course still a necessity for punishment as a deterrent, though one could imagine a world where punishment was pretend, people believed it was real but it was actually just CGI for example. — PeterPants
How could punishment act as a deterrent if people don't have freedom to choose? — Metaphysician Undercover
Anyway, you should really try to actually understand what people are saying before you start acting like a child and teasing them. — PeterPants
for practical reasons we must take responsibility for our actions, we still do them, even if we are not ultimately responsible for them. — PeterPants
that your personal experience of 'deciding' something, is an illusion, a trick. your brain does all the deciding outside of your control or understanding, it then tricks you into thinking you did it. — PeterPants
what exactly is upsetting your computer? — PeterPants
you seem to be confusing what is practical for you, as opposed to what is practical for society, im speaking of the latter. — PeterPants
i was not actually claiming that we 'should' act responsibly, what i was claiming was that if we want a productive society that enables the well being of its proponents, then we ought to take responsibility for what our own brains end up doing. they are after all OUR brains.
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