Free Will and Determinism

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  • čas přidán 25. 07. 2024
  • Join George and John as they discuss different philosophical theories. In this video they will be debating Free Will vs Determinism. Do humans freely choose their actions or are all our choices and our lives predetermined?
    The script to this video is part of...
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    0:00 - Introduction
    0:30 - Libertarianism
    0:55 - Hard Determinism
    1:48 - Universal Theory of Causation
    4:05 - Psychological Determinism
    5:58 - Theological Determinism (Divine Foreknowledge)
    6:48 - Soft Determinism (Compatabilism)
    #freewill #determinism #philosophy #metaphysics

Komentáře • 700

  • @PhilosophyVibe
    @PhilosophyVibe  Před 3 lety +5

    The script to this video is part of...
    - The Philosophy Vibe - "Free Will vs Determinism" eBook, available on Amazon:
    US: www.amazon.com/dp/B088QBFPXW
    UK: www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B088QBFPXW
    Canada: www.amazon.ca/dp/B088QBFPXW
    India: www.amazon.in/dp/B088QBFPXW
    Australia: www.amazon.com.au/dp/B088QBFPXW
    Germany: www.amazon.de/dp/B088QBFPXW

    • @caricue
      @caricue Před 2 lety

      Determinism is not the same as cause and effect. All of the universe functioning requires reliable causation, but this does not mean that there is only one way for every event to unfold. Atoms are mindless objects, they passively react according to their nature, they do not determine anything.

    • @mansipopli8268
      @mansipopli8268 Před rokem +1

      😊

  • @joshuamauro377
    @joshuamauro377 Před 8 lety +115

    I guess i had to write this.

    • @thephilogeist9202
      @thephilogeist9202 Před 8 lety +10

      +Joshua Mauro Yep, because you did.

    • @joshuamauro377
      @joshuamauro377 Před 8 lety +2

      souls don't exist but their could be an invisible toaster orbiting uranus.

    • @joshuamauro377
      @joshuamauro377 Před 8 lety +2

      wow! Who is acting twelve? You attack me with prejudice remarks because you don't agree with what I typed. DO you often treat people this manner when they disagree with you? I just used the Russell's Teapot analogy, if you were so knowledgeable in science you would know what I meant. without me having to explain it. I illustrated that the philosophic burden of proof lies upon a person making scientifically unfalsifiable claims, rather than shifting the burden of disproof to others
      (it's how science works). DO your self a favor and stop being cruel to others you disagree with. I hope you chilled and we could have a meaningful conversation however if you continue with your insults I will have no choice but to ignore you.

    • @middleearth3054
      @middleearth3054 Před 7 lety +1

      Yes and I had to write this reply. It can be quite amazing thinking about past events and what caused them.

    • @lizx9012
      @lizx9012 Před 5 lety +2

      I had to reply two years later.

  • @Everyman777
    @Everyman777 Před rokem +9

    We act on our desires, but we cannot choose our desires.

  • @cliokoopman8637
    @cliokoopman8637 Před 4 lety +32

    This channel has gotten me through all my tests, exams and assignments this semester. Thank you!

  • @MaRiLeNa596
    @MaRiLeNa596 Před 8 lety +41

    "None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe that they are free." - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

    • @Goabnb94
      @Goabnb94 Před 8 lety +14

      So that is assuming the belief that we are free is false.
      So that is assuming hard determinism.
      So that is assuming no choice and no responsibility.
      Which is the exact definition of slavery.
      It might be a Pascal Wager, but if there is no free will, there is no difference between free-will believers and hard determinists, so what difference does it make? Especially to those who believe in free will, they would believe it regardless. But if we have some level of free will, wouldn't that make the free-will believers more free? So basically, everybody who believes they are free, falsely or not, is at worst equal to hard determinists.

    • @thinginground5179
      @thinginground5179 Před 3 lety +1

      lol say that to 2020

  • @nate5830
    @nate5830 Před rokem +15

    This is so funny. I had this same conversation with my grandma and we ended up having it so similarly to this. I even tried to convince her of something very similar to soft determinism. She wouldn’t budge. Always thought there was free will.

    • @stopYmpersonatYngmYacCount
      @stopYmpersonatYngmYacCount Před rokem +3

      did this start with her accusing you of cookie theft?

    • @nate5830
      @nate5830 Před 11 měsíci

      @@PaulB_864 that is part of the conversation that we had. An important part of my belief is that in daily life and in regular decision making it is extremely important to act as if you have free will because if you don’t you can create an excuse for anything. Through regular life I think it’s important to behave like you have free will, but I really do think that my decision to behave this way was already determined at the beginning of time. I don’t think that truths of the world will always have real world applicability, this being one of them. But after saying all this I have to admit that my views might be changing. This is because of possible randomness in quantum mechanics, any real randomness would make determinism impossible. But since I don’t understand quantum mechanics and I haven’t investigated further I can’t be sure yet.

    • @jakub8682
      @jakub8682 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@PaulB_864 But doesn't the realization of the lack of free will make people more compassionate? When you realize that "bad" people never chose to be bad, it's easier (or finally possible) to forgive them, which than gives them opportunities to fix their mistakes/become "better" people

  • @jrphilosophy9656
    @jrphilosophy9656 Před 8 lety +4

    This video is perfectly explains the subject. Thank you for making this!

  • @prygler
    @prygler Před 9 lety +4

    Great video! Keep up the good work! It all contributes to a better world.

  • @Bacontaco-hn2eb
    @Bacontaco-hn2eb Před rokem +1

    Just wanted to say thank you to this channel for carrying me through my philosophy elective. Looking up your videos really simplified the content for me and helped me with my essays. Y’all the goats 🐐 Fr

    • @PhilosophyVibe
      @PhilosophyVibe  Před rokem

      Thank you for this comment. Great to hear we have helped so much :)

  • @RyAn15htfc
    @RyAn15htfc Před 7 lety +1

    Great vid guys, helped me a lot with understanding the debate!

  • @ashu2212
    @ashu2212 Před 7 lety +1

    Awesome work... I do appreciate your effort.

  • @ilikethisnamebetter
    @ilikethisnamebetter Před 5 lety +6

    If there is no free will, everything that anyone ever felt, thought, said or did was - and always will be - inevitable.

  • @spacewomantw
    @spacewomantw Před 8 lety +1

    This really helps and it's really detailed as well...

  • @WareSisters
    @WareSisters Před 9 lety +1

    Amazing summary. Thanks so much!!!

  • @vaisakhvm1726
    @vaisakhvm1726 Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for explaining Compatibilism in a short & nice discussion ❤

  • @loki_tha_god
    @loki_tha_god Před 9 měsíci +9

    Hard determinism will really come in handy if you get caught cheating on your spouse, although she probably won't see it that way.

    • @Misha0013
      @Misha0013 Před 12 dny

      even if she understand , she probably also determined to leave you :)

  • @bilalejaz4312
    @bilalejaz4312 Před 9 měsíci

    really appreciate the way they explain the difference and everything ❤

  • @EmilyKateJones01
    @EmilyKateJones01 Před 8 lety +1

    Thanks for that! Very helpful

  • @PHLBELAMINBASKEYBaskey

    Great, it gave me a new outlook which I had never knew.

  • @IIStaffyII
    @IIStaffyII Před 8 lety +36

    I'm a hard-determinist. this is how I see "free will" and I find it beautiful!
    When you are making a choice predetermined or not you are weighing pros and cons, that the outcome (your choice) was inevitable doesn't matter. It was still your unique pattern of thought which made the choice.
    Such a simple choice such as between an apple and a chocolate in your mind is much more complex and so much more beautiful, humans surely are the most beautiful programs. Even if the outcome (your choice) is a dull one.

    • @asstornaut1066
      @asstornaut1066 Před 8 lety +12

      saying the choice was inevitable is fatalism.
      and hard determinism it is.more like "humans are robots of some other force pulling the strings for them" liek the sims... this is stupid. there isn't any force forcing you to choose. even influenced. you are the final chooser

    • @AustinTexas6thStreet
      @AustinTexas6thStreet Před 8 lety +7

      Yep, still all very determined. He chose chocolate because he knew he liked it better....and by choosing chocolate, he also chose the apple for the other guy!! But the other guy was the one who decided to give him the option of a choice. He probably already knew which the guy would choose. So why did he offer the choice?? And so on... All of the "internal causes" are really just External causes if you go back a step or more.... External Causes in Internal Causes clothing

    • @CosmoShidan
      @CosmoShidan Před 4 lety +1

      Seems kind of linear though.

    • @jacquelinethereseplunkett221
      @jacquelinethereseplunkett221 Před 3 lety +3

      Why wasn't he free to simply not choose either

  • @polly10022
    @polly10022 Před 8 lety +15

    You just saved me from getting an F. Thanks!

  • @buzzmusic2005
    @buzzmusic2005 Před 8 lety +57

    I guess I'm a hard determinist, but I still think that people should be punished, not because they're responsible for their actions, but because if no one ever got condemned or punished or anything, people would just keep making the same harmful choices and the world would be way worse off. But as for determinism, yeah, I think that everything any person does has a cause, and whenever we can't identify that cause, we call the action their choice. If I picked an apple over a chocolate bar, that action was made because of a huge number of factors, like how I was brought up, what my brain looks like and how it works, all the emotions built up in my head at that exact moment, etc. But because the reasoning is so complex, it's easier for everyone to just say it was my choice, while in reality, it totally follows determinism.

    • @Christopher4700
      @Christopher4700 Před 8 lety +7

      yes punishment is an external force that does affect the internal forces of the individuals, we are brought to know that crime has punishment which for some people is the external factor that tips the scale to stop them from comitting a crime, but it's one of many external factors and at one point punishment can only do so much and cant stand alone.

    • @DavidGreen34
      @DavidGreen34 Před 8 lety +2

      @buzzmusic200 Who are we to say if the world is worse off or better off in a hard deterministic world? Animals kill and eat each other all the time, so why is it suddenly bad for humans to do so? Where did the morals to say what is good or bad come from?

    • @AjaxNixon
      @AjaxNixon Před 8 lety +2

      Totally agree. I look at it in respect to a sports match. Without rules and punishments for breaking those rules, there is no game, and no fun, just chaos. Those external forces of rules and punishments effect internal forces. I think people of free will and determinism mind sets can still agree on laws from this standpoint. Actually, I think determinists wouldn't agree with people getting away with crimes on pleas of insanity, because to a determinist no one has free will or responsibility, the punishment is merely to lessen the likelihood that others will break that same rule, when others know their will be punishment.

    • @neverstopaskingwhy1934
      @neverstopaskingwhy1934 Před 7 lety +1

      it came from social cooperation desire

    • @DavidGreen34
      @DavidGreen34 Před 7 lety +3

      Basekitball In a determined world, everything has a measureable cause, right? Wouldn't it stand to reason that a formula can be developed in which the future is exactly known due to knowing every cause that will be enacted on a human being?

  • @ag4832
    @ag4832 Před 8 měsíci

    One of the best video on free will I've ever seen. Exceptionally well done.

  • @gigisonline
    @gigisonline Před 8 lety +1

    Great video, thanks.

  • @roybecker492
    @roybecker492 Před 5 lety +4

    I appreciate this short video. It's fun. (out of the options mentioned Hard Determinism definitely wins tho)

  • @aaroncrawford494
    @aaroncrawford494 Před 4 lety +5

    Keep grinding guys! You're great!

  • @daisyduck8593
    @daisyduck8593 Před 8 lety +1

    Very good video thank you !I descripe in my video-series the forecast paradox : free will or determinism

  • @roiferreach100
    @roiferreach100 Před 5 lety +5

    Determinism and Predeterminism just leads to 'Here' and 'Now' , when you made a choice it's just another Determined and Predetermined cycle to 'Here' and 'Now'.
    No extremity needed.

  • @rickcoyote2361
    @rickcoyote2361 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you gentlemen. Shine On.

  • @vukpavlovic2712
    @vukpavlovic2712 Před 8 lety +1

    GradeAunderA :D i cant beliv it .I love you bro

  • @ufninoc
    @ufninoc Před 3 lety +1

    This is excellent work

  • @mohitsharmasharma7053
    @mohitsharmasharma7053 Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks.loved it.best among all philosophy channels n podcast.
    from india

    • @PhilosophyVibe
      @PhilosophyVibe  Před 6 lety +1

      So happy to read this. Appreciate the kind words and glad you're enjoying the videos :)

  • @Howdyho.
    @Howdyho. Před 8 lety

    I'm for determinism. To believe or consider free will would be a pre-determined fate. We're like characters in a movie, from the character's point of view every moment forward is unknown yet if you were to step outside of the box, you would see that your fate, your progressing story, has already happened in a sense and that you're merely a happening along a linear progression that makes up the movie that you are a character in. They explored this very example in the movie "The Last Action Hero". Of course we often look back on a past and make up a story that enables us to make sense of it to our liking, such as, "Oh I just chose to do that" etc. Great video guys, love the background. Very entertaining.

    • @DavidGreen34
      @DavidGreen34 Před 8 lety

      So what makes something good or bad? I have yet to hear a compelling argument for what makes morals, laws, and societal standards

  • @TheEtsgp1
    @TheEtsgp1 Před 8 lety +1

    hey what did platform, program etc. did you use to create this video?

  • @timothychen754
    @timothychen754 Před 2 lety

    Nice that you brought up chaos theory

  • @truesheltopusik1140
    @truesheltopusik1140 Před rokem +1

    Regarding Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, the point is that it is supposed to be physically impossible to know, not that we just happen to not have an answer yet(there are a lot of things we can't predict accurately, but have reason to believe that is just because we lack the variables/knowledge of how to do it).
    That said while I guess that would disprove determinism, it still does not provide any reason to believe in free will either, by definition it is completely random, so it's not chosen by "human decision". It's everything is determined, except for a few things that are completely random, I would not consider either of those free will.

  • @blanktank999
    @blanktank999 Před 8 lety

    the avoidance of pain/discomfort is the determining factor in all decisions... whether it is to avoid pain in the present or the future

    • @blanktank999
      @blanktank999 Před 8 lety

      ***** masochism=pleasure in the eliviation of mental trauma/pain vs pain
      curiosity=the grass could be greener

  • @TheKinix13
    @TheKinix13 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank You

  • @Strix182
    @Strix182 Před 8 lety +25

    This is a great crash course in free will and determinism, though the animation is rather amateur. Then again, I doubt I could do better, so I have no right to complain. Nicely done.

    • @DavidGreen34
      @DavidGreen34 Před 8 lety +2

      Didn't give any case for Free Will at all. At most, only discussed hard and soft determinism.

    • @maxreaper25
      @maxreaper25 Před 2 lety

      Why didn’t you jus erase everything but the last sentence?

  • @thatfrenchguy9140
    @thatfrenchguy9140 Před 8 lety +11

    How to justify punishing criminals through hard determinism:
    The criminal is acted upon by forces that make him endanger the mass. Therefore the the mass cannot afford to let these forces act against it through the criminal. Thus the mass removes the criminal. The mass, no longer under the pressure of the criminal, can understand the forces that caused the criminal to be a criminal. As it was hurt by the criminal's actions, it will attempt to fix the problem that caused the criminal to act. Then the ciminal may be reintegrated if he isn't too far gone.
    The judge is for all intents and purposes a clockmaker. The mass is a watch, and the clockmaker observes that the watch is broken. By observing the watch, he identifies the criminal as a damaged cog. the cog is removed to see how it blocks the system. Then by examining the watch further, the source of the advanced degradation of the cog can be identified (other cog needing oil...), and fixed. then the clockmaker examins the cog. if the cog can be fixed it can be reintegrated into the watch. If it is far too damaged, it is discarted and replaced.

    • @VelvetWind8
      @VelvetWind8 Před 8 lety

      This was a really interesting comment, but I'm not sure if your analogy aligns with the prison structure our society currently holds. In your scenario the judge is acting out of concern for the mass and he removes the cog in order to try and preserve its safety. I don't think that a modern day judge who sentences someone to prison is doing so solely out of concern for the public, it's also out of a desire to punish him for being morally wrong. This is made more apparent when you see how inmates are treated and how negative public views of criminals are (not saying they shouldn't be). So after reading your comment I'm still left wondering how punishment, or even praise are justified under a hard determinist lens.

    • @thatfrenchguy9140
      @thatfrenchguy9140 Před 8 lety

      +VelvetWind8 Oh that's easy: it doesn't. my comment was a thought experiment, not an accurate depiction of reality. If I was asked to justify the existence of a judicial system through hard deterministic values in a vacuum, that's how I'd do it, but it appears obvious that prisons all over the world were founded on a different set of values. One I do not necessarily agree with either.

    • @timtaft8585
      @timtaft8585 Před 6 lety

      Interesting proposal, but I have an objection. In some cases of criminal actions, the actual criminal "responsible" for committing the crime would actually have a very low chance of committing the same crime again or any other crime for that matter, especially if it is a case where they harmed someone they knew personally (maybe they have personal issues or something). If those personal issues are only in place with said friend/family member, after the crime is committed the offender may have a very low chance of committing that crime again because the influence is gone. By this logic, it wouldn't be rational to place them in prison for something they (1) didn't have control of and (2) something they likely wouldn't do again regardless of whether or not they go to prison.
      However, I could see a way you could make this argument work. Firstly, just to note, I am not a hard determinist. I am a compatibalist (just getting that out of the way).
      You could argue that while (1) yes, the offender didn't have control over their actions, and (2) they may have a low chance of committing the crime again, however (3) punishing them could influence other members of society NOT to commit the same crime.

    • @shakovskanton3540
      @shakovskanton3540 Před 4 lety

      this clock /watch analogy is represented in this video, when he explains a society founded on determinism
      czcams.com/video/rfOMqehl-ZA/video.html

    • @shakovskanton3540
      @shakovskanton3540 Před 4 lety

      @Bush 911 the point was to explain to people why we would still "punish" criminals under the pretense of determinism where we are all void of moral responsibility. and instead of using "punish", we ought to use "treat".
      you have to explain things to change people properly. how could we ever get to being a determinism founded society, if we never even explain the foundations of that society?
      sure everything can be predetermined, but we still have to actually go through the process of acting it out. its the whole point of a determinist society, it doesn't just fall into nihilism and chaos and the void.
      it actively changes and thinks about what is best for the whole.

  • @obbie611
    @obbie611 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank god you rebranded! New animation better, thanks for help with degree

  • @JustCC6057
    @JustCC6057 Před 8 lety +9

    Do you happen to have the text transcribed? I want to show it to my brother, who can't hear.

    • @PhilosophyVibe
      @PhilosophyVibe  Před 8 lety +17

      +Siana Mirandjeva Yes we do. Email philosophyvibe@gmail.com and we will reply with the script.

    • @helicoppter
      @helicoppter Před 7 lety +1

      I want the script too

    • @Remembering-rq6si
      @Remembering-rq6si Před 6 lety +2

      Then, obviously, you should email philosophyvibe@gmail.com How can you be intelligent enough to contemplate determinism vs. free will and not figure out that?

  • @azure7687
    @azure7687 Před 8 lety +1

    Amazing

  • @BarkHowl
    @BarkHowl Před 8 lety

    What about Agency and Agent as prime mover unmoved, or uncaused causer/author of one’s actions?

  • @dwightlowman961
    @dwightlowman961 Před 7 lety +2

    Amazing video, thank you. I would add that I believe and have a theory called "collective will". That our will is the collective of every influence around us at the given moment AND by our life experiences leading up to that moment. I have another theory called "Womb envy", which states that the womb sets our baseline desired state. From the moment we are born, we desire and thus pursue things that recreate that level of comfort. Your "internal will" is governed by the "parenting" that you get and makes some choices more desirable and some less. Humans will always choose the choice they believe will either give them the most pleasure or avoid the most pain. Anything that bring us closer to the perfect state of nourishment (food), temperate (clothing), and physical and emotional security (shelter) give us pleasure.

  • @adrianalexisoscar1369
    @adrianalexisoscar1369 Před 7 lety +4

    Free will and determinism can be attach together.
    Think about a video... If during a video, a person was asked to choose between a chocolate or an apple, and he ended up choosing the chocolate...
    Playing the video several times will end up on the same result... the person chosing a chocolate, but at least, he had the free will to chose while the video was recorded. :v
    I hope that summarizes your video

  • @darcevader4146
    @darcevader4146 Před 2 lety +1

    great video you guys should try and do a video on compatibilism it would be interesting to see
    edit: oh never mind you already did

  • @irrelevant2235
    @irrelevant2235 Před 2 lety +4

    The sense of free will seems to be a very specific programming by evolution. As such, the purpose of free will must relate to nature's two mandates of survival and reproduction. Since it seems to be a very specific programming, how specifically is it
    useful as it relates to survival and reproduction?

  • @yallaskate
    @yallaskate Před 8 lety

    how does this fit in with the multiverse theory? do completely random events basically form the web that is ultimately different predetermined fates for everyone? food for thought.

  • @connorohare1808
    @connorohare1808 Před 6 lety +1

    Personally, soft determinism does make sense in the fact that organisms do have to adjust and change for the environment around them which is an almost infinite of variables, but this is just personal speculation about why we had to evolve concepts such as "personal responsibility" in the first place which is a psychological tool used as a reference point for deciding what behaviors are good and bad to begin with.

  • @mateteglas9100
    @mateteglas9100 Před 6 lety +4

    Omg. I just love this topic sooo much.. I havr many thoughts on those naturally. (That is caused by my environmental factors-->determinism).
    Its funny when they argue about weather they should punish anyone for doing something bad... haha I mran of course we should. The first thing we should note is that if we realise something in our nature (lets say we are deterministic) the logical conclusion is not to suspend our laws... Just cause we realized something NATURAL LAW does not mean anything COMMANDING to our SOCIETY LAWS. What if our societal laws are also deterministic? Either way we choose it will be deterministic. Its just a natural law nothing has to do with how we punish ppl. We should understand the difference between natural laws and societal laws. Natural laws are there if we know it or not does not matter what we do they r there. But they dont force us to do anything. What we do as a socuety are moral arguments and of course we can pumisg criminals... and we should cause thats the right thing
    That does not contradict to determinism. They are determined but think of a scenario how much more deteemimed would they be if there were no alienating factor as the law? Much more ppl would steal and murder so its a good thing... its hard to comprehend but thinfs are like this. As a society we should focus on making people good citizens.

  • @aminegy678
    @aminegy678 Před 5 lety +2

    awesome

  • @daisyduck8593
    @daisyduck8593 Před 8 lety +2

    I 've done 10 videos about free will and determinism

  • @benjaminbao3561
    @benjaminbao3561 Před 3 lety +1

    I was determined to watch this, because God want me to know my fate was sealed. We think we are free but we are driven by the necessities of the everyday like a car is driven by human.

  • @marvinedwards737
    @marvinedwards737 Před 6 lety +4

    Here's a simple demonstration of compatibility. In the video, John is offered both a chocolate bar and an apple. John plays football and needs to boost his energy for the game coming up a little later, and the extra fat plus the caffeine in the chocolate will give him the boost he needs to play better and longer. So, when John selects the chocolate bar rather than the apple, he is doing so according to his own purpose and his own reasons. Therefore, two things are simultaneously true:
    (A) Because his choice is a product of his own purpose and his own reasons, he has made the choice of his own free will.
    (B) Because his choice is a product of his own purpose and his own reasons, it is causally determined.
    Free will is our ability to decide for ourselves what we "will" do, when "free" of external coercion or other undue influence. This definition requires nothing supernatural, makes no anti-causal assertions, is commonly understood by and correctly applied by nearly everyone in all practical scenarios, and is quite sufficient for both moral and legal responsibility.
    Determinism is the belief that the objects and forces that make up the physical universe behave in a reliable fashion, such that, it is theoretically possible to predict their interactions and events in advance with perfect accuracy, given sufficient information (e.g., omniscience) and calculation power (e.g., omnipotence).
    It is important to take note of the fact that determinism itself, being neither an object nor a force, plays no active role in bringing about any events. It is not an actor on the stage of reality.
    On the other hand, we exist as physical objects, living organisms, and an intelligent species that can imagine a variety of ways to satisfy our needs, and choose which option will best suit our own purpose and our own reasons, and act upon that choice. And when we act upon our chosen intent, we are forces of nature.

    • @marvinedwards737
      @marvinedwards737 Před 6 lety

      For more on this, see: marvinedwards.me/2017/08/19/determinism-whats-wrong-and-how-to-fix-it/

    • @marvinedwards737
      @marvinedwards737 Před rokem

      @Mike It's "free will", not "free desire". While we may not choose our desires, we definitely do choose what we will do about them. A desire that controls you is termed an "irresistible impulse", and subject to psychiatric treatment. Normally, people have sufficient impulse control to avoid being taken over by their various desires.
      Free will is literally a freely chosen "I will". Deciding what we will do sets our intention upon accomplishing something specific. This intention then motivates and directs our subsequent mental and physical actions toward satisfying that intent.
      So, what is "free will" supposed to be "free of"? Normally, it is a choice we make while free of coercion (a guy holding a gun to our head) and other forms of undue influence (a significant mental illness, being under the authority of someone as in parent/child, commander/soldier, doctor/patient relationships, etc.)
      Cause and effect in itself is neither coercive nor undue. Only specific causes qualify as coercion and undue influences.
      So, the notion of universal causal necessity/inevitability (determinism) in itself is also neither coercive nor undue.
      It is not even a meaningful constraint, because what we will inevitably do is exactly identical to us just being us, choosing to do what we choose to do. It is basically "what we would have done anyway", and that is not a meaningful constraint.

    • @marvinedwards737
      @marvinedwards737 Před rokem

      @Mike I don't see how you get to that conclusion, Mike. Weren't you free to post that comment? Aren't you free to decide what you will have for dinner? Aren't you generally free to do what you want? What kind of constraint is there that you need to be "free of"?

    • @marvinedwards737
      @marvinedwards737 Před rokem

      @Mike In order to be meaningful, the terms "free" and "freedom" must reference some meaningful constraint. For example:
      1. We set the bird free (from its cage).
      2. We each enjoy freedom of speech (free from censorship).
      3. The lady in the grocery store was offering us free samples (free of charge).
      4. I participated in Libet's experiment of my own free will (free of coercion and undue influence).
      Note that in none of these normal uses of "free" or "freedom" is there any mention of "freedom from reliable cause and effect". Why is that? Because every freedom we have, to do anything at all, requires reliable causation. To suggest being free from that which freedom requires is paradoxical, and therefore irrational.
      So, if we stop pretending that we need to be free of cause and effect in order to be free, we can realize that all of the meaningful and relevant freedoms are still available to us.

    • @marvinedwards737
      @marvinedwards737 Před rokem

      @Mike "known in advance to the code of reality"? What kind of superstitious nonsense is that?
      To "know" anything requires a brain. To make a choice also requires a brain. Although my choice will be causally necessary from any prior point in time, the choice will not be made until my brain actually makes it.

  • @neverstopaskingwhy1934
    @neverstopaskingwhy1934 Před 8 lety +1

    The immobilization and unification of the world:
    We know that matter want to find immobilization by knowing how our happiness works and we have to remember that we human are made of matters. Happiness is a state that we continuously want to feel. Which mean we want a immobilization state, because in a none immobilization state we are not satisfied, if we still have movement which mean we still have a goals, it mean we have to satisfy our goals to have none and find total immobilization. In that theory we would think that death is the perfect immobilization and total happiness but even in death matter has movement. So in order to find perfect happiness, matter has to continuously assemble itself in one single point where it will create the perfect immobilization and unification.
    Well this is the theory that is really vulgarize and simplified by all me.

  • @Roedygr
    @Roedygr Před 7 lety +1

    Clearly, much of the time we have external constraints on our choices, e.g. the law, social disapproval, cost...
    So in those instances, surely we do not have free will -- ability to do what we please.
    Ditto for internal constraints. I cannot jump up and run a marathon. The very idea makes me exhausted.
    I suspect this problem will be "solved" by deciding it is too wooly to admit a solution.

  • @vapeonly7835
    @vapeonly7835 Před 8 lety +8

    My argument against internal causes is that we have the free will to go against our desires, our emotions, our cultures and make REAL choices.

    • @leonardu6094
      @leonardu6094 Před 2 lety

      @@JamesScotmore Do you still hold this view?

    • @hstenzelorigami8489
      @hstenzelorigami8489 Před 2 lety +5

      If it is against your emotions thoughts and desires what would cause you to make this “real choice”.

    • @leonardu6094
      @leonardu6094 Před rokem

      @Mike Just a question.

  • @apewdiebro
    @apewdiebro Před 2 lety +1

    As a hard determinist, to address the idea of “if everything is cause and effect then why punish?” I always viewed it as more cause and effect. We punish and reward to condition people so they are more or less inclined to behave a certain way. Therefore I don’t view punishment as a measure of fault necessarily, as it isn’t our fault the way we are. Punishment is more an effort to change perceived “bad” behavior.

    • @lifes40123
      @lifes40123 Před rokem

      Or we can simply say punishment is a consequence of or a part of determinism.

  • @patman142
    @patman142 Před 6 měsíci +1

    going back to the example about the bar vs the apple, is it free will that decides to take the chocolate or is it all the taste buds on your tongue sending signals to your brain? All your thoughts, emotions and feelings correspond with brain stems. If a neuroscientist studies your brain using MRI etc, they can roughly correlate feelings and thoughts with specific parts of the brain. Every thought you've ever had can be traced back to electrical signals that have taken place in your brain. So where is the freedom in all of this, we don't control these processes. Those processes all occur according to the laws of physics and these things are outside our control.

  • @10000yr-s
    @10000yr-s Před 8 lety

    Interesting video. My opinion from a theist perspective: our mind to comprehend determinism is limited by our human mind. If a God created time - if we contemplate on it, can we even imagine creating time? If we cannot, how can we comprehend a being existing outside of time.
    In the meantime, our view of it is contaminated by pop culture like back to the future and comics, that time must be like a line and when we return to the past it must be like in a movie.
    John Calvin only gave an analogy in his understanding of predeterminism: There is a gate which on top says 'Welcome', alot of people walking outside the gate. some chose to walk in, some chose not to. The ones that walked in, when they turn around and look at the back to the gate saw the words 'you were chosen'.

  • @TheNewsDepot
    @TheNewsDepot Před 8 lety +1

    The Quantum superstate defeats the determinist hypothesis as you don't get an outcome until you observe the particle and therefore you can't have predetermined the state it would end up in. Such observation would have to be persistent to know the outcomes, they can not be calculated in advance. No matter how much knowledge you start with or how much processing power, quantum states ruin your perfect predictions.
    The best you would be able to do, ever, would be to predetermine probabilities. but no outcomes would ever be certain.

  • @shakespearaamina9117
    @shakespearaamina9117 Před 4 lety

    Thanks

  • @capibaraluvr9398
    @capibaraluvr9398 Před 5 lety +3

    Could you please make a video on berkeley and free will & the self

    • @PhilosophyVibe
      @PhilosophyVibe  Před 5 lety +1

      Yes this is on the list. Thank you for the recommendation.

    • @capibaraluvr9398
      @capibaraluvr9398 Před 5 lety

      Would you happen to know of any readings & primary & secondary sources I could use to write on this topic ?

  • @salixstorm1571
    @salixstorm1571 Před 8 lety +1

    The problem with this line of reasoning for determinism is that it is based upon newtonian physics. But quantum physics shows that the universe is not as predictable as we thought.

    • @kasianowakowska7984
      @kasianowakowska7984 Před 3 měsíci

      He expressed it precisely at minute 3:21: "Just because the cause is unknown doesn't negate its existence." The inability to predict the behavior of quantum particles doesn't imply they lack causality. Consider the flip of a coin: its outcome is deemed random due to the absence of complete information on influencing factors. However, if factors such as throwing force, air resistance, and mass were known, the outcome could be anticipated. Thus, randomness doesn't negate causality; it simply highlights our incomplete understanding of all contributing factors.

  • @changchen09
    @changchen09 Před rokem +1

    Very well discussed!! 👏🏻👌🏻
    For me, what i understood is, freewill and determinism both overlap in every action of ours since we do have a previous cause to determine the situation but we also can't determine how strong or weak is the cause which has an effect on our choices now..
    Some causes are really strong and determined that it results will reap anyway and some causes are there which are not deterministic and thus it gives us some space to have freewill to do better or worse based on our discriminatory wisdom which shapes our feelings, feelings shape our intention which give the results as actions.
    This is what i learnt from Nalanda studies based on Buddhist psychology and philosophy. 🤔🫣

  • @Liberty969
    @Liberty969 Před 7 lety

    Would a fulfillment of a prophecy be proof for determinism?

  • @philippwells1429
    @philippwells1429 Před 8 lety

    I really like this. As of now, I agree with the guy on the right. I would like to add a question, which I suppose would be addressed particularly to the guy on the left but also the guy on the right and anyone reading: why punish those who do wrong? Why not help them to change their ways? Rehabilitate I suppose. What does punishment accomplish? It seems to me that rehabilitation is much more productive. One more question: why doesn't society take a close look at what determines people's destructive behaviors and try to prevent them from happening in the first place? I suppose I'm particularly referring to a massive education reform.

  • @i8910midnight
    @i8910midnight Před 6 lety

    Doesn't occam's razor work with this? that hard determinism is too complex and that the simplest solution should be considered as the best? therefore, freewill is correct?

  • @cstevens16
    @cstevens16 Před 8 lety +1

    what are emotions and desires and where do they come from?

  • @sophisticatedfart2368
    @sophisticatedfart2368 Před 8 lety +9

    I like this channel. Feels like I'm hanging out with people as smart as me.

    • @sophisticatedfart2368
      @sophisticatedfart2368 Před 8 lety

      +Krash Landon that kind of depends

    • @StayCool9948
      @StayCool9948 Před 8 lety +2

      sheep chained by ego

    • @sophisticatedfart2368
      @sophisticatedfart2368 Před 8 lety

      +Le Cat you sure? You're free to have your opinion but are you sure though?

    • @Nnnn88888
      @Nnnn88888 Před 8 lety +2

      The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt.

    • @sophisticatedfart2368
      @sophisticatedfart2368 Před 8 lety

      +Nathan Mørkeberg Reece funny how you say that after stating your hard opinion...

  • @martijnbouman8874
    @martijnbouman8874 Před 8 lety +6

    Good video, but I have to correct you at 3:24. Quantum Mechanics and the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle do not say that we cannot KNOW the position and path of every particle; rather, it says that particles do not HAVE a specified position and path. 'Uncertainty Principle' is a bad translation of the German 'Unbestimmtheitsrelation'. A better translation would be: Undeterministic Principle.
    Of course, this does not help the vieuwpoint of free will, because now human action are the consequenses of the events in the past, the laws of nature and random chance. That still leaves no space for free will. A better comparison would have been: MATERIALISM vs free will.
    If you want to hear my opinion about free will: I think it just depends on the definition wheather we have it. The concept of free will that determinism makes impossible, would always be impossible, because that concept is flawed. To see why, imagine that our consciencesness operates wholly independent of physical reality, and that our choises are determined by what happens in this consciencesness. Seems like we would have free will then, ey? But, then our consciencesness would have to operate in some way according to some princples, and hence it would then be this principles that determine our actions, hence we would not have free will. This concept of free will never works when you try to specify how the free will actually works.
    Of course, we should still hold people accountable for their actions. We do not punish people out of revenge, but because people are more likely to behave themselves when they know they can be punished, and for various other reasons.

  • @Rspknlikeab0ssxd
    @Rspknlikeab0ssxd Před 5 lety

    I'm not sure where I reside in this debate, but I have numerous problems with hard determinism which is why I don't think I'd be able to hold it. For one, if you buy into the argument that we'll eventually be able to predict every single thing that will ever happen by cause and effect, then we should be able to print you a book that has your entire life sequence written out. However, it seems if this was the case, you could choose to differently than the book says. I have so many other objections, and further explanations, example and counter example, etc. But no time for it now

  • @kentheengineer592
    @kentheengineer592 Před 11 měsíci

    Internal Desire Thou Are Determined independent of choice however we can choose to act on our desires or choose not to if given the option to choose

  • @Danzka354
    @Danzka354 Před 7 lety +11

    I am not a native english speaker but i will try to make my point clear and speak simply: I think there is something wrong in the way we treat the subject. If you put it in an other way, something appears to be quite obvious: what would it truly mean to have free will? I think it is simply unthinkable! We cannot be what we are not, and what are we? I think we are what Schopenhauer calls the Will, and we could not want to be something else, it is not possible to be what we are not.. Everything is determined which means we had to be this way because everything follows the will, but now, we, humans, think that we are seperated from the will, as if we were detached from a sort of survival instinct, but in fact i think that it is still the case exepted that we got more and more complex and invented tons of beliefs and concepts... We make one with everything in the universe, because we are the same thing, we are the will itself but it is like we don't know it because we invented more and more words and more and more concepts , as we evoluated which drove us away from our primal animal will.. did i make my point? so whatever we choose is to be choosen because it responds to the will, and we cannot complain about it because it is unthinkable that we could want to be something else. And what is now arising within us would be the will recognizing itself through all of our humans sensations and thoughts etc... Things are the way they are because they could not be otherwise, as if it responds to a necessity... and it is normal that we humans think that it is unfair because we invented concepts of morality and justice. A deer who sees her dead mom may feel in danger and hurt but does not think it is unfair... In the other hand i think that knowledge still drives us away from a primitive will and that it can extend our possibilities of choices, even if we don't choose, by experiencing life and learning every sort of things we bring to our brain all kind of experiences that offers the will various possibilities... so it is not : our self is determined by the will, but rather : our self is the will and cannot be nor want to be something else. because if we say that we are trapped in a body and mind determined by all sort of causes and effects, then we suppose that there is something that is not and which undergoes the will..i think we are the will itself, what could we be otherwise?

  • @delysidtusko1516
    @delysidtusko1516 Před 7 lety

    As long as you can't predict the future it is bold to claim it is determined :)

    • @JoeBudd-D
      @JoeBudd-D Před 7 lety

      But that's something that is closer to happening.

  • @gray9439
    @gray9439 Před 3 lety

    Most underrated channel

  • @s.papadatos6711
    @s.papadatos6711 Před 4 lety

    I have a possible theoretical senario for trying to understand free will. It starts like this:
    We are made of matter, our emotions, actions and choices are subject of interaction of matter with matter.
    Matter is governed by the laws of nature.
    The laws of nature are studied and researched by Physics
    According to classical physics, matter in our scale, behaves acc. to the law of causality (everything can be calculated and described).
    According to quantum physics , matter at the subatomic level behaves completely different ( Werner Heissenberg law, etc)
    As a result of the upper 2 statements, for the scale of our existential dimension we should validate the classical physics and accept the causation argument.
    We dont truly choose, that doesnt mean though that we are free of our vices. (utilitarian ethics)
    I 'd love to read anyones thoughts.

  • @jan_harald
    @jan_harald Před 6 lety

    I can pre-say that I sure don't have free will
    I have freedom to decide within limits though
    the walls of reality are shaky around me...

  • @heyblue5001
    @heyblue5001 Před 3 lety

    I'm not philosophy student but i do understand it so well tysm

  • @franknimal9966
    @franknimal9966 Před 6 lety

    The origin of the big bang is a thought. Thoughts are acts of creations. Yes you can choose another's thought and make it your own, or you can create brand new thoughts. The space of thoughts are infinite. This is why they cannot be determined. An infinite source provides infinite possibilities continuously without ever running out. When you say we don't have free will? what is the "we" made from? One must clarify what the "thing" that has or has no free will made from before you can say anything about if it does have free will or not. So the steps for a viable approach is.
    1. What is the definition of free will?
    2. What stuff makes the "thing" that I call me?
    3. Does that stuff permit free will?
    These are my answers to the above
    1. What is the definition of fee will.
    The ability to change space-time 4 dimensionally, that is change past present and future
    2.What stuff makes the "thing" that I call me?
    The thing I call me is a single thing that is made of stuff that can connect simultaneous events as is evident from my ability to see simultaneous event.
    3. Does that stuff permit free will?
    A thing that can connect simultaneous events can operate faster than the speed of light and as such can change past present and future as needed by the definition
    philpapers.org/rec/DESCAS

  • @hamnchee
    @hamnchee Před rokem

    What is will, and what is it meant to be free of?

  • @black-cross
    @black-cross Před měsícem

    He didn't punch someone because he was angry. He did it because he lacked self-control.

  • @aperson1234567891098
    @aperson1234567891098 Před 9 lety +12

    Great Video. I think you should've focused more on justifying morals with hard compatabilism, though. Make more videos and I'll sponsor you.

    • @PhilosophyVibe
      @PhilosophyVibe  Před 9 lety +3

      Thank you for your comment. We are currently working on a portfolio of videos and will be populating the website in the coming months so stay tuned. Feel free to also sign up to the site and get involved in our philosophical debates.We are looking for users to post essays and help grow Philosophy Vibe.

    • @chastitywhiterose
      @chastitywhiterose Před 9 lety

      aperson1234567891098 I'm part of a podcast where we talk a lot about morality from the perspective of no free will.
      Free Will, Science and Religion subscription links:
      itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/free-will-science-religion/id1001850850?mt=2
      www.stitcher.com/podcast/chandler-klebs/free-will-science-and-religion?refid=stpr

    • @AustinTexas6thStreet
      @AustinTexas6thStreet Před 8 lety +1

      Everything is Determined and we have No Free Will... but we lack the ability to observe or comprehend the infinite Causal Events in a way that would allow us to predict everything...but it Could be done by someone smarter than us!! Murderers were Always gonna murder before they were even born (it was set into motion by the Big Bang {or before} and a causal chain made it inevitable)!!! However, we can't just have murderers and rapists running around the streets freely!! Anyway, I would just say that it was also inevitable and Determined that he would go to prison etc!!!

    • @chastitywhiterose
      @chastitywhiterose Před 8 lety

      David Belcher Yes, ironically we have no choice but to attempt to stop others from doing what hurts us and those we love.

    • @DavidGreen34
      @DavidGreen34 Před 8 lety +1

      @David Belcher If it was determined why should we punish murder? What about age of consent, was that determined by the big bang as well?

  • @TheAidenSanders
    @TheAidenSanders Před 5 lety

    Because those results would fit perfectly In the illusion of free will, if you want to create an illusion of free will you would certainly punish or praise people by their actions... so it looks like they have a choice but in reality is part of a more complex mechanism, the mechanism of existence itself...

  • @josephfrierson7440
    @josephfrierson7440 Před 8 lety +6

    I have been considering Free Will and Determinism and 'A God With A Rigid Plan' for some years. I have not reached any Hard Nosed Conclusions. Reviewing my 74 years of life, I can see validity in why I acted in the way that I did **** Because **** I was programmed to act the way that I did. There are days when I 'think' I can see myself as a pre-designed, pre-wired, 'robot'. And there are days when all Heck Breaks Loose, and I can't figure out 'who' or 'what' is running my show.
    I appreciate your video, and your deep coverage of the subject. This is a Heavy Duty Subject, and most of it is Way Over My Labor's Mentality. My studies have caused me to be less condemning, less intolerant, of the Humanoids around me. At the same time, I do have the Right of Self Defense **** Don't I ?

    • @saraloe4702
      @saraloe4702 Před 8 lety

      +Joseph Frierson It's a joy to pontificate even without firm conclusions though isn't it? :)

    • @ahairyrice
      @ahairyrice Před 8 lety

      +Joseph Frierson What is this "I" you talk about?

    • @josephfrierson7440
      @josephfrierson7440 Před 8 lety

      +Harry Rice ---- It is the same things that you have.
      Me, MySelf, and I.
      The same things that you have.

    • @muhammadalkhawarizmi3630
      @muhammadalkhawarizmi3630 Před 8 lety +1

      +Joseph Frierson
      We are all programmed base on the Law of Nature and a lot of choice given to us to make. Not making a choice means leaving the environment (including others) to make a choice.

  • @VasCorpBetMani
    @VasCorpBetMani Před 8 lety +7

    This video was inevitable, and is occurring bit-by-bit as prescribed by the laws of physics.

    • @JoeBudd-D
      @JoeBudd-D Před 7 lety

      It couldn't be any other way. And there is no ''you.''

    • @Dexiteros
      @Dexiteros Před 4 lety

      @@JoeBudd-D Are you still alive after these 2 years? (Serious question)

    • @jpod4237
      @jpod4237 Před 2 lety

      X Y Are you?

  • @being5100
    @being5100 Před 8 lety

    if time; the past present and future are all happening now, then it is a moot point whether or not there is free will.....

  • @stenba96
    @stenba96 Před 8 lety +1

    Hard determinist here!
    We put people in jail because we're determined to do so.

    • @JoeBudd-D
      @JoeBudd-D Před 7 lety

      That is true but it's also true that in the future we're determined to let everyone out of jail.

  • @beafranchezkamallari3925

    what are their similarities?

  • @musakirtanete6020
    @musakirtanete6020 Před 4 lety

    Free Will and Determinism mntap bnget

  • @TimPowerGamer
    @TimPowerGamer Před 3 lety +1

    Why not both?

  • @MrBlue-km8qv
    @MrBlue-km8qv Před 4 lety

    3 billion years of adapting to environmental changes in food and culture from losing wars culture changes. from winning wars culture changes. from changes in technology culture changes.

  • @franknimal9966
    @franknimal9966 Před 6 lety

    he origin of the big bang is a thought. Thoughts are acts of creations. Yes you can choose another's thought and make it your own, or you can create brand new thoughts. The space of thoughts are infinite. This is why they cannot be determined. An infinite source provides infinite possibilities continuously without ever running out. When you say we don't have free will? what is the "we" made from? One must clarify what the "thing" that has or has no free will made from before you can say anything about if it does have free will or not. So the steps for a viable approach is.
    1. What is the definition of free will?
    2. What stuff makes the "thing" that I call me?
    3. Does that stuff permit free will?
    These are my answers to the above
    1. What is the definition of fee will.
    The ability to change space-time 4 dimensionally, that is change past present and future
    2.What stuff makes the "thing" that I call me?
    The thing I call me is a single thing that is made of stuff that can connect simultaneous events as is evident from my ability to see simultaneous event.
    3. Does that stuff permit free will?
    A thing that can connect simultaneous events can operate faster than the speed of light and as such can change past present and future as needed by the definition
    philpapers.org/rec/DESCAS

  • @sharmainefernando6931
    @sharmainefernando6931 Před 9 lety

    this is great! although I wish you expanded the ending and shut down the soft determinist argument thought. also, I saw someone else comment that if criminals were held responsible for their actions, then punishing them for their actions is ok too...rendering the entire determinism argument useless to anything. Doesnt mean its not true or interesting!

  • @spywriter007
    @spywriter007 Před 3 lety

    Determinism doesn't always have one outcome though... something could result in many outcomes.. of which one could then use free will to choose one of those outcomes. For example... consider a bowling ball that hits a set of numbered bowling pins... knocking them all down.... and you choose one or more of those bowling pins to keep (or not). Do you choose one, do you choose none or do you choose many?

  • @polinomyalmariano9500
    @polinomyalmariano9500 Před 8 lety

    what I learned is that there is only one who speak at both individual :D

  • @daleg.9673
    @daleg.9673 Před 7 lety +3

    It seems ridiculous to think that someone with infinite knowledge could have predicted the exact content of this thread. Matter can be arranged into autonomous beings that are wholes greater than the sums of their parts.

  • @canwelook
    @canwelook Před 2 lety

    The agreement: We act in accordance with our will
    The dispute: Do we choose what we will?

  • @iamalittleboat
    @iamalittleboat Před 8 lety

    I don't think determinism damages the justice system; it only emphasises the fact that we ought to focus on rehabilitation over vengeance, - always. And I do believe; the fact that we have _punishment_ works as an external factor on people's actions, and in that way it is further justified by (indirect?) prevention of law-breaking actions.