Everett:Peter, thank you for this post. I like your use of analogy, I like your thinking, and you are making this a very enjoyable discussion for me.
I'm glad you enjoy it as well.
Everett:To use your analogy, it is my observation that there are people who
desire to fix broken cables, and people who desire to break properly
functioning cables. Is the person who desires to break properly
functioning cables merely a broken cable himself? And if so, can
he be fixed? Maybe with the right kind of self-awareness, he could fix
himself? Maybe there are some broken cables that are beyond repair? I'm pretty sure I've run into a few...
A person deliberately breaking stuff is kind of broken himself (unless he is a demolishenist by profession). Can he be fixed? I don't know, we see from experience not all mental problems can (at least easily) be fixed with current levels of knowledge. Fixing one's self is only possible if you were to run in to the answer anyway. Asking a therapist to give you some different input, directed to confront you with the error in your brain operation, is more likely to get you fixed. For your brain to change it needs to realize it is in error, someone pointing out the error can be helpfull.
Everett:In criminal law there is the concept of
mens rea, meaning that to be considered guilty of a crime, a person must have known that what they did was wrong and must have had the ability to stop it. Does determinism make
mens rea impossible?
'Should have had the ability to stop it', is impossible if determinism is true. However I can see where the reason for this comes from. You are not going to punish someone who has no clue what he has done wrong, since it would not have any corrective power. For the punishment to work, the criminal must know what principle he violated, to know what type of actions he should avoid in the future.
Most justice system also punish a 'crime passionel' more lightly than a life long deliberated premeditated murder. This because it is assumed the premeditated murderer has the bad character traits more deeply ingrained in his behavior and is more likely to do similar things in the future then the impuls murderer. It is questionable if the impulse murderer will be deterred a next time by earlier punishment.
Everett:Here is a blog post about a study that seems to indicate that people who hold a belief in determinism are more likely to engage in "cheating" than people who hold a belief in free will. This would seem to demonstrate the power of the
argument from morality.
I heard of that study. It is the reason why there is a philosopher (forgot his name) who concluded that free will could not be true, but was of the opinion you should not tell people, because of this effect. He thought morality could still stand, but it was to complicated to explain to common folk. I always suspected Stef to secretly have the same opinion
.
But what to say about that research. It is an argument from effect (prevent cheating) not to seek or tell truth and would be an exception to the rule 'truth is better than error'. I am hesitant with arguments from effect and I am in love with universal principles. It is not known if the moral deteriation goes beyond cheating and how long the effect lasts. If we look at main factors of moral decay then the government and the praise of violence is on the top of the list and people cheating on tests cooked up by psychologists is very low. I would say:stick to universal principles to demolish the state and religion and if we end up with a society in which cheating on psychology tests by people who have been primed with a determinist text is the biggest problem, hey, I don't think tears will flow in great quantities. I have not heard of many cases in which the defendent claimed determinism as excuse for a crime (although a lawyer of the rich Loeb family tried to use the brutal upbringing of his client as an deterministic excuse. We will perhaps never know if the determinst argument or the money got the sentence from death to life imprisonment)
Instead of looking to the threat that determinism poses to repsonsibility, you can see it as an oppertunity also. If people start to look for causes of criminal behavior, and find the connection to parental violence and trace the causal chain of violence all the way back....... we already know to what conclusion they will come. If you start pulling that little rope with curiosity, you wil find out there is a fricking big gun at the other end. If people instead say:'it was just his free will', then it's a dead end. They will never get to his parents and daddies role in the military.
Violence has nothing with which to cover itself except the lie, and the
lie has nothing to stand on other than violence. Any man who has once
acclaimed violence as his method must inexorably choose the lie as his principle. Solzhenitsyn, Alexander