s_lone, as I'm reading through this whole thing, the phrase 'cognitive dissonance' just keeps echoing through my head. Lessans had apparently never heard the phrase, or he'd be aware that we often make decisions which are NOT the ones of most reward, and then change our minds later about what makes us happy to help us live with the decision we made. Cognitive dissonance also drives us to justify unfavourable actions, and I can't see some magic mindset making it disappear from human psychology. Cognitive dissonance is also what would push one to overlook flaws in a theory that they've invested immense amounts of time and energy in, only to see fail.
Why can't you talk to me directly? This has nothing to do with cognitive dissonance. Lessans was not trying to fit something into his worldview to make it work. So you're wrong once again.
OK. Two simple question.
If nothing other than myself causes me to take the decision, what does?
Why is the self free of causal relations?
The self is not free of causal relations. There is always a reason why a person chooses one thing over another. I hope keep trying to understand the two-sided equation. I don't know how else to get this concept across.
s_lone said:
If definitions mean nothing where reality is concerned, why would Lessans' definition of determinism describe reality any more accurately than the classical definition?
Because it does. It is a more accurate definition because it is based on an accurate observation.
s_lone said:
At least the latter is consistent. But Lessans leaves out a blank spot. He says the will is neither free nor determined in the classical sense. Yet you say:
''After we choose something, it could have never been otherwise. The act of contemplating is also determined; therefore what appears to be a free act is really not free at all, even though our ability to weigh our options is part of the deterministic process.
You also say:
we don't fall outside of the laws of our nature and in this respect our actions are determined, even though our will is not excluded from the deterministic process.
You are getting all mixed up again. Our will is part of the process of determinism because we must choose what gives us greater satisfaction. But we have a will and we can choose. Can you agree with that? :confused3:
s_lone said:
How is this deterministic process different than in the classical definition?
Because the classical definition says that we are caused by other forces that take our will completely out of the equation. This is not accurate.
s_lone said:
I still see one. I guess I must no understand. :roll:
You see one what?
s_lone said:
I understand that this is what Lessans means by ''God''. And that is the meaning I was using in my comment. If God compels to always go in the direction of greater satisfaction no matter what, than I don't see how we escape classical determinism. The will is not free. We can't control our will. So I don't see how this all makes us responsible. Why not say that God is responsible?
God is responsible because God (the laws of our nature) cannot be escaped. What prevents someone from striking a first blow to another, is for the reason that everyone must forgive him; they must turn the other cheek. And he knows this is in advance. This causes a change in his attitude because of his conscience. Conscience works in a very predictable way. In a free will environment, conscience has never been able to reach the temperature necessary to prevent these terrible crimes. But that changes with this knowledge.
s_lone said:
Why can't it be done? Even though nobody else is blaming you, the guilt that you have towards your own self means that you are blaming yourself. Perhaps you can escape outside blame if somehow, Lessans' No Blame principle was applied magically, but you can't escape your own blame towards yourself, which is what causes guilt in the first place. What would stop someone from escaping this self-blame by saying that in the end, he couldn't have done otherwise, that he was compelled by God (nature) do do what he did?
The guilt toward yourself is what
prevents the act because no one can get satisfaction out of doing something to someone with no justification. This principle removes the justification because there is nowhere for conscience to go to ease itself. I know it's hard to understand why responsibility for one's actions cannot be shifted, but that's exactly what happens under these conditions. And that is where conscience steps in because it cannot find a way to rationalize its behavior.
s_lone said:
As I just said, you can blame yourself. And there is no reason why some people wouldn't want to escape this inner guilt by holding God responsible.
Don't you see that's just another excuse to justify your actions. But when no one is holding you responsible, you can't use God or any other excuse to justify your behavior. The responsibility therefore rests on your shoulders, and there is no way to shift it.
This proves conclusively that the only time he can say, "I couldn’t help myself because my will is not free," or offer any kind of excuse, is when he knows he is being blamed for this allows him to make this effort to shift his responsibility. Let me explain this in still another way.
When you know you are not going to be blamed for what you do it also means that you must assume complete responsibility for what you do because you cannot shift it away from yourself under the changed conditions We have become so confused by words in logical relation that while we preach this freedom of the will we say in the same breath that we could not help ourselves, and demonstrate our confusion still more by believing that the corollary, Thou Shall Not Blame, would lessen our responsibility when it does the exact opposite. Did you ever see anything more ironically humorous? The only time we can use the excuse that our will is not free is when the world believes it is free. The world of free will (the world of blame) has allowed people to lie and cheat in order to get what they want and then shift responsibility away from themselves when questioned.
Many philosophers have gotten confused over this one point because it was assumed that a world without blame would only make matters worse, decreasing responsibility to an even greater extent and giving man the perfect opportunity to take advantage of others without having to worry about consequences. But this can only occur when man knows he will be blamed, which allows him to come up with reasonable excuses. When he knows in advance that no matter what he does to hurt others the response will be one of no blame because the world knows his will is not free — he cannot find justification for what he is about to do. In other words, the knowledge that the world must excuse what he can no longer justify prevents the desire to take even the slightest chance of hurting another. Under these conditions, responsibility reaches a level never seen before in all of history. This will become clearer as we continue.
s_lone said:
How do you have ''mathematical'' control? The notion of ''control'' suggests some form of free will right? If the will is not free, than we have no control whatsoever, mathematical or not.
No s_lone, just because nothing can make us do what we choose not to do, doesn't make our will free. It just means that we can't point to something outside of ourselves and say that without our permission, this
caused me to do what I did. The conditions of our life create the desire to choose one option over another, which is why our will is not free. All this statement is saying that
you alone are making the choice and nothing but you. If I hit you, I did it, even though the world knows, once it occurs, I was under a compulsion to do it. The only real difference between Lessans' definition and the classical definition is the idea of 'greater satisfaction' and the idea that 'cause' does not mean that something other than you is performing the action.
s_lone said:
Unless the economic system forces everyone to the exact same condition, some people will always have more than others. And for that reason alone, people will desire to have things that they do not and that others do. Even in a system where everybody has a basic standard of living, if some people have more than others, than some people will envy and desire what these lucky people have.
Wrong. There is a big difference between gaining something at someone else's expense when not to hurt them does not make you a loser; and hurting someone in order to survive. Conscience knows the difference. One is a first blow, the other is not and can be justified by conscience.
s_lone said:
If what Lessans' says is so undeniable I guess we must all be incredibly stupid right? Me, the others participating in this thread, all the other fools you tried to convince in other forums. It must be painful to live in a world of such ignorance!:roll:
Not really. It's not up to me. We're developing and when it's the right time, this knowledge will be understood by science. Until then, we will continue developing and using our laws to prevent man from doing bad things to people. It's up to something much bigger than me or Lessans. All he was doing was sharing his observations.
s_lone said:
I started reading it and stopped because it was boring, repetitive and poorly written and especially, especially boastful while being severely flawed.
I wish you good luck in your advertising. But if I were you, considering you really go along with Lessans, I'd put more energy in working on what makes the book indigestible than advertising it.
I cannot do more. I've worked on this a long time and I've realized that no matter how it is written, there will be people who find it offensive. Yet, they won't take the time to read the book in its entirety as the author asked. But they will have a lot to say about how wrong Lessans was. And that's okay. I have no control over what other people think, or do. I do suggest s_lone to keep reading because it will clarify a lot of things. If you don't want to, that's your choice in the direction of satisfaction. You can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink.