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{{Short description|View that free will does not exist}}
]
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2020}}
'''Hard determinism''' (or '''metaphysical determinism''') is a view on ] which holds that that ] is true, and that it is ], and thus that free will does not exist. It is contrasted with ], which is a ] form of determinism, holding that free will may exist even despite determinism.<ref></ref> It is also contrasted with ], the other major form of incompatibilism which holds that free will exists and determinism is false.
]s]]
'''Hard determinism''' (or '''metaphysical determinism''') is a view on ] which holds that ] is true, that it is ], and therefore that free will does not exist. Although hard determinism generally refers to ],<ref name=stanfordincompatibilismarguments>{{cite encyclopedia|last=Vihvelin |first=Kadri |editor=Edward N. Zalta | title=Arguments for Incompatibilism | encyclopedia=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy| edition=Spring 2011 | year=2011 | url=http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2011/entries/incompatibilism-arguments}}</ref> it can also be a position taken with respect to other forms of determinism that necessitate the future in its entirety.<ref name=VanArragon2010>{{cite book|author=Raymond J. VanArragon|title=Key Terms in Philosophy of Religion|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JyTohO1AMzwC|access-date=22 December 2012|date=21 October 2010|publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group|isbn=978-1-4411-3867-5|page=21}}</ref>

Hard determinism is contrasted with ], which is a ] form of determinism, holding that free will may exist despite determinism.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.philosophy-dictionary.org/Hard_determinism |title=Philosophy-Dictionary.org on "Hard Determinism" |access-date=24 April 2011 |archive-date=22 December 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151222091803/http://www.philosophy-dictionary.org/Hard_determinism |url-status=dead }}</ref> It is also contrasted with ], the other major form of incompatibilism which holds that free will exists and determinism is false.

== History ==
=== Classical era ===
In ], ] initiated the rationalistic teaching that any ] is obliged to pursue the chief good conceived by his or her mind.<ref>Plato, '']'', 345e; 358c.</ref> ] speculated that an unconscious divine power acts in the world and causes the origin, growth, and breakdown of things.<ref>Cicero, '']'' ''On the Nature of the Gods'', I, 35 (XIII).</ref> ] asserted the identity of the possible and the necessary and inferred that future events are as determined as the past ones.<ref>Epictetus, "Discourses." B, 19, 1 in '']'', trans. Robin Hard. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014. {{ISBN|0199595186}}.</ref> ] refuted the "]" invented to discredit determinism as if human efforts were futile in a preordained world; he explained that fated events occur with the engagement of conscious agents.<ref>Origen, '']'', trans. ]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1965. II, 20, 340.55-342.61.</ref>

The ], a classical Indian text composed around 4th century BCE, also mentions hard deterministic ideas. Krishna, the personification of Godhead, says to Arjuna in the verse 13.30:

{{Blockquote|They alone truly see who understand that all actions (of the body) are performed by material nature, while the self actually does nothing.|}}

=== Modern era ===
In the 17th century, both ]<ref>Locke, John. '']'', XXI.</ref> and ]<ref>Spinoza, Baruch. ''Ethica ordine geometrico demonstrata'' ]''], Pars II, Propositio XXXV, Scholium; Propositio XLVIII.</ref> argued for strict ] of ] acts.
{{Blockquote|text=Men are deceived because they think themselves free…and the sole reason for thinking so is that they are conscious of their own actions, and ignorant of the causes by which those actions are determined.|author=Baruch de Spinoza|title=''The Philosophy of Spinoza''|source="The Nature and Extent of Human Knowledge", p. 175<ref>de Spinoza, Baruch. ''The Philosophy of Spinoza'', edited by J. Ratner. USA: Tudor Publishing, 2010. </ref>}}
In the ], ]<ref>d’Holbach, Baron. "The Illusion of Free Will." In '']''.</ref> promulgated the naturalistic interpretation of mental events. ] observed that everyone regards himself free '']''; however, '']'' he must discover that he had been obliged to make the decisions he actually made.<ref>Schopenhauer, Arthur. 1818. ''Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung'' ]'']. I Band. Leipzig: Philipp Reclam Jr. . S.167.</ref> ] noticed that free decisions are graded as '']'', emerging from non-existence.<ref>Nietzsche, Friedrich. 1886. ''Jenseits von Gut und Böse'' ]'']. Leipzig: C.G.Neumann. S.21.</ref>

=== Contemporary history ===
Recently, ] stressed the limitations of free will on grounds of experimental evidence for unconscious choice and action.<ref>Wegner, Daniel. 2003. "The mind's best trick: How we experience conscious will." '']'' 7(2):65–69.</ref> To prove determinism, the following putative experiment was proposed: all principal differences between the features of an artificial ] and that developing naturally can be avoided.<ref>Mele A.R. 2006. '']''. Oxford, NY: Oxford University Press. p. 189. {{ISBN|978-0-19-537439-1}}.</ref>


==Overview== ==Overview==
Meeting a challenge, agents make decisions in conformity to the inherited character, life history, and current stimuli. The field of acute attention is limited, and motives partly remain unconscious. From the first person's perspective, we have an intuitive commitment that many options are available. However, if the total of the mental content is considered from the third person's perspective, only a single decision deemed by the agent as the most favorable at the moment turns out real. The validity of causation for any mental event becomes apparent taking into account their neurophysiological correlates.<ref>]. 1990. ''Mind and Brain: A Theory of Determinism'' 1. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 244. {{ISBN|978-0198242826}}.</ref> Different causal descriptions correspond to the mental and physical domain.<ref>Searle J. "Mental causation, conscious and unconscious", ''Int J.Philosophical Studies'' (2000), Volume 8, p.171-177.</ref> Laws of thermodynamics and quantum mechanics govern the latter. Admitting downright mental causation of physiological impulses would mean surplus determination. The surmise that under identical conditions, alternative decisions and actions are possible is disproved by naturalists as an illusion.<ref>Walter H. 2002. "Neurophilosophy of free will." Pp. 565–75 in ''Oxford Handbook of Free Will''. Oxford: Oxford University Press.</ref>
Hard determinism is not taken to refer merely to a determinism on earth, but in all of reality (e.g. involving the effects of light from other galaxies, etc); not just during a certain deterministic period of time, but for all time. This also means that the relation of necessity will be bi-directional. Just as the initial conditions of the universe presumably determine all future states, so too does the present necessitate the past. In other words, one could not change any one fact without affecting the entire timeline. Because hard determinists often support this ] view of time, they do not believe that there are genuine chances or possibilities, only the idea that events are 100% likely.<ref name=SEPDeterminism></ref> Hard determinism is not taken to refer merely to a determinism on earth, but in all of reality (e.g. involving the effects of light from other galaxies, etc.); not just during a certain deterministic period of time, but for all time. This also means that the relation of necessity will be bi-directional. Just as the initial conditions of the universe presumably determine all future states, so too does the present necessitate the past. In other words, one could not change any one fact without affecting the entire timeline. Because hard determinists often support this ] view of time, they do not believe that there are genuine chances or possibilities, only the idea that events are 100% likely.<ref name="SEPDeterminism">Hoefer, Carl. 2016. "" (revised). ''Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy''.</ref>


Unlike “law fundamentalists”, some philosophers are “law pluralists”: they question what it means to have a law of physics. One example is the “Best Standards Analysis”, which says that the laws are only useful ways to summarize all past events, rather than there being metaphysically “pushy’’ entities (this route still brings one into conflict with the idea of free will ]). Some law pluralists further believe there are simply no laws of physics.<ref name=SEPDeterminism/> The ] suggests that there are other universes in which the laws of physics and ] are different. Andreas Albrecht of ] in London called it a "provocative" solution to one of the central problems facing physics. Although he "wouldn't dare" go so far as to say he believes it, he noted that "it's actually quite difficult to construct a theory where everything we see is all there is".<ref>{{cite journal |last=Chown |first=Markus |month=June |year=1998 |title=Anything goes |journal=New Scientist |volume=158 |number=2157 url=http://space.mit.edu/home/tegmark/toe_press.html}}</ref> Unlike "law fundamentalists", some philosophers are "law pluralists": they question what it means to have a law of physics. One example is the "Best Standards Analysis", which says that the laws are only useful ways to summarize all past events, rather than there being metaphysically "pushy" entities (this route still brings one into conflict with the idea of free will).{{citation needed|date=February 2012}} Some law pluralists further believe there are simply no laws of physics.<ref name=SEPDeterminism/> The ] suggests that there are other universes in which the laws of physics and ] are different. Andreas Albrecht of ] in London called it a "provocative" solution to one of the central problems facing physics. Although he "wouldn't dare" go so far as to say he believes it, he noted that "it's actually quite difficult to construct a theory where everything we see is all there is."<ref>{{cite journal |last=Chown |first=Markus |date=June 1998 |title=Anything goes |journal=New Scientist |volume=158 |number=2157 |url=http://space.mit.edu/home/tegmark/toe_press.html}}</ref>


The feasibility of testing determinism is always challenged by what we know, or think we can know, about the idea of a final, all encompassing, ]. Some physicists challenge the likelihood of determinism on the grounds that certain ] stipulate that the universe is fundamentally ], such as the ]; whereas other interpretations are deterministic, for example, the ] and the ]. The ] of testing determinism is always challenged by what is known, or what is thought to be known, about the idea of a final, all-encompassing, ]. Some physicists challenge the likelihood of determinism on the grounds that certain ] stipulate that the universe is fundamentally ], such as the ]; whereas other interpretations are deterministic, for example, the ] and the ].
] describes how a deterministic system can nonetheless exhibit behavior that is impossible to predict: as in the ], minor variations between the starting conditions of two systems can result in major differences. ] describes how a deterministic system can exhibit perplexing behavior that is difficult to predict: as in the ], minor variations between the starting conditions of two systems can result in major differences. Yet chaos theory is a wholly deterministic thesis; it merely demonstrates the potential for vastly different consequences from very similar initial conditions. Properly understood, then, it enlightens and reinforces the deterministic claim.<ref name=SEPDeterminism/>
<ref name=SEPDeterminism/>


== Implications for ethics == == Implications for ethics ==
{{see also|Moral responsibility}} {{see also|Moral responsibility}}
] of sufficient intelligence morally responsible (pictured above: attempts to build lifelike machines)]] ] of sufficient intelligence morally responsible (pictured above: attempts to build lifelike machines).]]
Hard determinists reject free will. Critics often suggest that, in so doing, the hard determinist also rejects ]. The key to this argument rests on the idea that holding a person morally responsible requires for them to make a choice between two, or more, truly possible alternatives. If choice is indeed impossible, then it would be incorrect to hold anyone morally responsible for his or her actions. If this argument holds, hard determinists are restricted to ]. Hard determinists reject free will. Critics often suggest that, in so doing, the hard determinist also rejects ]. The key to this argument rests on the idea that holding a person morally responsible requires them to make a choice between two, or more, truly possible alternatives. If choice is indeed impossible, then it would be incorrect to hold anyone morally responsible for his or her actions. If this argument holds, hard determinists are restricted to ].
This feature, however, is tenable only as far as hard determinists discard responsibility. In a necessitarian world, recourse to merit and blameworthiness is toned down while adherence to ethical and legal values is not ruined. Persons may be appreciated as carriers, executors, and defenders of morality. Alternatively, the choice to be regretful of past misdeeds becomes unreasonable. Nevertheless, one can admonish oneself for one's lapses and resolve to avoid similar behavior in the future.<ref>Pereboom, Derk, ' 'Meaning in life without free will ‘‘, in ''Oxford Handbook of Free Will'', Oxford:Oxford University Press , p.477-488.</ref>
Those hard determinists who defend ] would object to the premise that contra-causal free will is necessary for ethics. Those who are also ] may also point out that there are good reasons to ] criminals: it is a chance to ], or their punishment can act as a deterrent for others who would otherwise act in the same manner. The hard determinist could even argue that this understanding of the ] and ] of a psychopath's behaviour, for instance, allow them to respond even more reasonably or compassionately.<ref>]. 9 September 2012. " {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130827133926/http://www.samharris.org/blog/item/life-without-free-will |date=27 August 2013 }}." ''SamHarris.org''.</ref>


Hard determinists acknowledge that humans do, in some sense, "choose," or deliberate—although in a way that obeys natural laws. For example, a hard determinist might see humans as a sort of ], but believe it is inaccurate to say they "came to a decision" or "chose".
Those hard determinists who defend ] would object to the premise that contra-causal free will is necessary for ethics. Those who are also ] may also point out that there are good reasons to ] criminals: it is a chance to ], or their punishment can act as a deterrent for others who would otherwise act in the same manner. The hard determinist could even argue that this understanding of the ] and ] of a psychopath's behaviour, for instance, allow them to respond even more reasonably or compassionately.
Generalization of event causation should circumvent overstatement of external impulses. ] personalities show a high rate of activities all by themselves. The capacity to resist psychological assault is impressive evidence of autarkic resources. Determinists even admit that with corresponding knowledge, changes in the genetic depository and consequently behavior are possible.


Up to now, the concepts and terminology of legal affairs follow the pre-reflexive belief in alternative possibilities. As scientific insight advances, the juridical attitude becomes increasingly "external": there should be fewer emotions about offender's will and more concern about the effects of offenses on society. The retributive function of punishment should be rejected as irrational and unjustified. "Lex talionis" is discarded already because of deficient correlation between crime and penalty. If the inveterate notion of "mens rea" is used at all, then only to distinguish intentional actions from inadvertent ones and not to designate an autonomous undertaking of the lawbreaker. At the same time, it is justified to require the perpetrator to critically reconsider his intentions and character, to demand apology and compensation in victims' favor. The rehabilitation service should be used to train the risky circle for keeping the norms of social life.<ref>Carusom Gregg D. 2016. "Free will skepticism and criminal behavior: A public health-quarantine model." ''Southwest Philosophy Review'' 32(1).</ref>
Hard determinists acknowledge that humans do, in some sense, 'choose', or deliberate - although in a way that obeys natural laws. For example, a hard determinist might see humans as a sort of ], but believe it is inaccurate to say they 'came to a decision' or 'chose'.


== Psychological effects of belief in hard determinism == == Psychological effects of belief in hard determinism ==
Research on the psychological effects of a belief in hard determinism, including attitudes towards causal determinism, is ongoing and presents mixed results. While some studies suggest that certain perspectives on free will and determinism can influence moral decision-making, the direct impact of such beliefs on specific behaviors, such as aggressiveness, compliance, or helpfulness, remains a complex and open area of study. The relationship between these philosophical beliefs and changes in self-assessment or behavior is not yet fully understood and requires further empirical investigation.<ref>Baumeister, R. F., C. J. Masicampo, and C. N. De Wall. 2009. "Prosocial benefits of feeling free: disbelief in will increases aggression and reduces helpfulness." '']'' 35(2):260–68.</ref>
] was an ] ] philosopher who coined the term "soft determinist" in an influential essay titled ''The Dilemma of Determinism''.<ref></ref> He argued against determinism, holding that the important issue is not personal responsibility, but hope. He believed that thorough-going determinism leads either to a bleak ] or to a degenerate ] in moral judgment. He proposed the way to escape the dilemma is to allow a role for ]. James was careful to explain that he would rather "debate about objects than words", however. He did not insist in saying that replacing determinism with a model including chance had to mean we had 'free will'.


] was an American ] philosopher who coined the terms "soft determinist" and "hard determinist" in an influential essay titled "The Dilemma of Determinism".<ref>James, William. "." University of Kentucky.</ref> He argued against determinism, holding that the important issue is not personal responsibility, but ]. He believed that thorough-going determinism leads either to a bleak ] or to a degenerate ] in moral judgment. He proposed the way to escape the dilemma is to allow a role for ]. James was careful to explain that he would rather "debate about objects than words", which indicates he did not insist on saying that replacing determinism with a model including chance had to mean we had "free will."
The determinist would counter-argue that there is still reason for hope. Whether or not the universe is determined does not change the fact that the future is unknown, and might very well always be. From a ] point of view, a person's actions still play a role in the shape of that future. Thomas W. Clark, founder and director of the Center for Naturalism, explains that humans are not merely the playthings of patterned, natural forces in the universe - but rather we are ourselves examples of those forces.<ref></ref>


The determinist would counter-argue that there is still reason for hope. Whether or not the universe is determined does not change the fact that the future is unknown, and might very well always be. From a ] point of view, a person's actions still play a role in the shape of that future. Founder and director of the Center of Naturalism, Thomas W. Clark, explains that humans are not merely the playthings of patterned, natural forces in the universe—but rather we are ourselves examples of those forces.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.naturalism.org/freewill1.htm |title=Naturalism.org, "Free Will and Naturalism: A Reply to Corliss Lamont" |access-date=24 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110928020846/http://www.naturalism.org/freewill1.htm |archive-date=28 September 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
In fact, it is even conceivable that it is a ''lack'' of belief or understanding of determinism that is likely to cause 'bleak pessimism', or else ] (one could suffer from feelings of ]). An individual might therefore be enlightened by hard determinism in some sense. By understanding the many factors of a situation that influence their behavior as natural beings, they may obtain greater objectivity in their decision making.
The deterministic view aligns our representations with the faculties and possibilities we actually possess but it should avoid misleading introspection. Admitting agents' dependence on a drastic background can enhance insight, moderate severity and spare unproductive suffering.<ref>Mazlovskis Arnis.' 'On free will and determinism' ‘.’ 'Reliğiski-filozofiski raksti' ' (2015), XIX, p.22-42. ISSN 1407-1908.</ref> Insofar as the mind comprehends universal necessity, the power of emotions is diminished.<ref>de Spinoza, Benedict. 2009. '']'', translated from R. H. M. Elwes. part V, proposition VI.</ref>

Research on the ] has yet support the idea that belief in determinism has negative consequences.


==See also== ==See also==
* ]
] * ]
* ]
* ]


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist}} {{Reflist}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2011}}
{{Determinism}}


] ]
]

Latest revision as of 16:37, 6 January 2025

View that free will does not exist

Hard determinists believe people are like highly complex clocks, in that they are molecular machines

Hard determinism (or metaphysical determinism) is a view on free will which holds that determinism is true, that it is incompatible with free will, and therefore that free will does not exist. Although hard determinism generally refers to nomological determinism, it can also be a position taken with respect to other forms of determinism that necessitate the future in its entirety.

Hard determinism is contrasted with soft determinism, which is a compatibilist form of determinism, holding that free will may exist despite determinism. It is also contrasted with metaphysical libertarianism, the other major form of incompatibilism which holds that free will exists and determinism is false.

History

Classical era

In ancient Greece, Socrates initiated the rationalistic teaching that any agent is obliged to pursue the chief good conceived by his or her mind. Strato of Lampsacus speculated that an unconscious divine power acts in the world and causes the origin, growth, and breakdown of things. Diodorus Cronus asserted the identity of the possible and the necessary and inferred that future events are as determined as the past ones. Chrysippus of Soli refuted the "idle argument" invented to discredit determinism as if human efforts were futile in a preordained world; he explained that fated events occur with the engagement of conscious agents.

The Bhagavad Gita, a classical Indian text composed around 4th century BCE, also mentions hard deterministic ideas. Krishna, the personification of Godhead, says to Arjuna in the verse 13.30:

They alone truly see who understand that all actions (of the body) are performed by material nature, while the self actually does nothing.

Modern era

In the 17th century, both John Locke and Baruch Spinoza argued for strict causality of volitional acts.

Men are deceived because they think themselves free…and the sole reason for thinking so is that they are conscious of their own actions, and ignorant of the causes by which those actions are determined.

— Baruch de Spinoza, The Philosophy of Spinoza, "The Nature and Extent of Human Knowledge", p. 175

In the Age of Enlightenment, Baron d’Holbach promulgated the naturalistic interpretation of mental events. Arthur Schopenhauer observed that everyone regards himself free a priori; however, a posteriori he must discover that he had been obliged to make the decisions he actually made. Friedrich Nietzsche noticed that free decisions are graded as causa sui, emerging from non-existence.

Contemporary history

Recently, Daniel Wegner stressed the limitations of free will on grounds of experimental evidence for unconscious choice and action. To prove determinism, the following putative experiment was proposed: all principal differences between the features of an artificial zygote and that developing naturally can be avoided.

Overview

Meeting a challenge, agents make decisions in conformity to the inherited character, life history, and current stimuli. The field of acute attention is limited, and motives partly remain unconscious. From the first person's perspective, we have an intuitive commitment that many options are available. However, if the total of the mental content is considered from the third person's perspective, only a single decision deemed by the agent as the most favorable at the moment turns out real. The validity of causation for any mental event becomes apparent taking into account their neurophysiological correlates. Different causal descriptions correspond to the mental and physical domain. Laws of thermodynamics and quantum mechanics govern the latter. Admitting downright mental causation of physiological impulses would mean surplus determination. The surmise that under identical conditions, alternative decisions and actions are possible is disproved by naturalists as an illusion. Hard determinism is not taken to refer merely to a determinism on earth, but in all of reality (e.g. involving the effects of light from other galaxies, etc.); not just during a certain deterministic period of time, but for all time. This also means that the relation of necessity will be bi-directional. Just as the initial conditions of the universe presumably determine all future states, so too does the present necessitate the past. In other words, one could not change any one fact without affecting the entire timeline. Because hard determinists often support this eternalist view of time, they do not believe that there are genuine chances or possibilities, only the idea that events are 100% likely.

Unlike "law fundamentalists", some philosophers are "law pluralists": they question what it means to have a law of physics. One example is the "Best Standards Analysis", which says that the laws are only useful ways to summarize all past events, rather than there being metaphysically "pushy" entities (this route still brings one into conflict with the idea of free will). Some law pluralists further believe there are simply no laws of physics. The mathematical universe hypothesis suggests that there are other universes in which the laws of physics and fundamental constants are different. Andreas Albrecht of Imperial College in London called it a "provocative" solution to one of the central problems facing physics. Although he "wouldn't dare" go so far as to say he believes it, he noted that "it's actually quite difficult to construct a theory where everything we see is all there is."

The feasibility of testing determinism is always challenged by what is known, or what is thought to be known, about the idea of a final, all-encompassing, theory of everything. Some physicists challenge the likelihood of determinism on the grounds that certain interpretations of quantum mechanics stipulate that the universe is fundamentally indeterministic, such as the Copenhagen interpretation; whereas other interpretations are deterministic, for example, the De Broglie-Bohm theory and the many-worlds interpretation. Chaos theory describes how a deterministic system can exhibit perplexing behavior that is difficult to predict: as in the butterfly effect, minor variations between the starting conditions of two systems can result in major differences. Yet chaos theory is a wholly deterministic thesis; it merely demonstrates the potential for vastly different consequences from very similar initial conditions. Properly understood, then, it enlightens and reinforces the deterministic claim.

Implications for ethics

See also: Moral responsibility
Some hard determinists would hold robotic beings of sufficient intelligence morally responsible (pictured above: attempts to build lifelike machines).

Hard determinists reject free will. Critics often suggest that, in so doing, the hard determinist also rejects ethics. The key to this argument rests on the idea that holding a person morally responsible requires them to make a choice between two, or more, truly possible alternatives. If choice is indeed impossible, then it would be incorrect to hold anyone morally responsible for his or her actions. If this argument holds, hard determinists are restricted to moral nihilism. This feature, however, is tenable only as far as hard determinists discard responsibility. In a necessitarian world, recourse to merit and blameworthiness is toned down while adherence to ethical and legal values is not ruined. Persons may be appreciated as carriers, executors, and defenders of morality. Alternatively, the choice to be regretful of past misdeeds becomes unreasonable. Nevertheless, one can admonish oneself for one's lapses and resolve to avoid similar behavior in the future. Those hard determinists who defend ethical realism would object to the premise that contra-causal free will is necessary for ethics. Those who are also ethically naturalistic may also point out that there are good reasons to punish criminals: it is a chance to modify their behaviour, or their punishment can act as a deterrent for others who would otherwise act in the same manner. The hard determinist could even argue that this understanding of the true and various causes of a psychopath's behaviour, for instance, allow them to respond even more reasonably or compassionately.

Hard determinists acknowledge that humans do, in some sense, "choose," or deliberate—although in a way that obeys natural laws. For example, a hard determinist might see humans as a sort of thinking machines, but believe it is inaccurate to say they "came to a decision" or "chose". Generalization of event causation should circumvent overstatement of external impulses. Autotelic personalities show a high rate of activities all by themselves. The capacity to resist psychological assault is impressive evidence of autarkic resources. Determinists even admit that with corresponding knowledge, changes in the genetic depository and consequently behavior are possible.

Up to now, the concepts and terminology of legal affairs follow the pre-reflexive belief in alternative possibilities. As scientific insight advances, the juridical attitude becomes increasingly "external": there should be fewer emotions about offender's will and more concern about the effects of offenses on society. The retributive function of punishment should be rejected as irrational and unjustified. "Lex talionis" is discarded already because of deficient correlation between crime and penalty. If the inveterate notion of "mens rea" is used at all, then only to distinguish intentional actions from inadvertent ones and not to designate an autonomous undertaking of the lawbreaker. At the same time, it is justified to require the perpetrator to critically reconsider his intentions and character, to demand apology and compensation in victims' favor. The rehabilitation service should be used to train the risky circle for keeping the norms of social life.

Psychological effects of belief in hard determinism

Research on the psychological effects of a belief in hard determinism, including attitudes towards causal determinism, is ongoing and presents mixed results. While some studies suggest that certain perspectives on free will and determinism can influence moral decision-making, the direct impact of such beliefs on specific behaviors, such as aggressiveness, compliance, or helpfulness, remains a complex and open area of study. The relationship between these philosophical beliefs and changes in self-assessment or behavior is not yet fully understood and requires further empirical investigation.

William James was an American pragmatist philosopher who coined the terms "soft determinist" and "hard determinist" in an influential essay titled "The Dilemma of Determinism". He argued against determinism, holding that the important issue is not personal responsibility, but hope. He believed that thorough-going determinism leads either to a bleak pessimism or to a degenerate subjectivism in moral judgment. He proposed the way to escape the dilemma is to allow a role for chance. James was careful to explain that he would rather "debate about objects than words", which indicates he did not insist on saying that replacing determinism with a model including chance had to mean we had "free will."

The determinist would counter-argue that there is still reason for hope. Whether or not the universe is determined does not change the fact that the future is unknown, and might very well always be. From a naturalist point of view, a person's actions still play a role in the shape of that future. Founder and director of the Center of Naturalism, Thomas W. Clark, explains that humans are not merely the playthings of patterned, natural forces in the universe—but rather we are ourselves examples of those forces. The deterministic view aligns our representations with the faculties and possibilities we actually possess but it should avoid misleading introspection. Admitting agents' dependence on a drastic background can enhance insight, moderate severity and spare unproductive suffering. Insofar as the mind comprehends universal necessity, the power of emotions is diminished.

See also

References

  1. Vihvelin, Kadri (2011). "Arguments for Incompatibilism". In Edward N. Zalta (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2011 ed.).
  2. Raymond J. VanArragon (21 October 2010). Key Terms in Philosophy of Religion. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 21. ISBN 978-1-4411-3867-5. Retrieved 22 December 2012.
  3. "Philosophy-Dictionary.org on "Hard Determinism"". Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 24 April 2011.
  4. Plato, Protagoras, 345e; 358c.
  5. Cicero, De Natura Deorum On the Nature of the Gods, I, 35 (XIII).
  6. Epictetus, "Discourses." B, 19, 1 in Discourses, Fragments, Handbook, trans. Robin Hard. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014. ISBN 0199595186.
  7. Origen, Contra Celsum, trans. H. Chadwick. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1965. II, 20, 340.55-342.61.
  8. Locke, John. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, XXI.
  9. Spinoza, Baruch. Ethica ordine geometrico demonstrata , Pars II, Propositio XXXV, Scholium; Propositio XLVIII.
  10. de Spinoza, Baruch. The Philosophy of Spinoza, edited by J. Ratner. USA: Tudor Publishing, 2010. p. 175
  11. d’Holbach, Baron. "The Illusion of Free Will." In System of Nature.
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  28. de Spinoza, Benedict. 2009. Ethics, translated from R. H. M. Elwes. part V, proposition VI.
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