AB,
So using this example to elaborate on my apparent fallacy,
In my original post, you imply that I jump from "deterministically driven" to the conclusion of "mindless robots". And you are correct in saying that this alone is not valid reasoning. As has been pointed out to me many times, everything we do is driven deterministically, but my conclusions lie in looking to the source of the deterministic events. In the physical model the cause of an event will be determined by previous physical events, which thus trace back ad infinitum through to the beginning of time. The big question lies in pondering the feasibility of how chains of pre determined physical events can define the apparent conscious control we perceive. This is a very big and complex topic. CS Lewis devotes a major part of his book "Miracles" on discussing this, and as I recall he leaves the reader to draw their own conclusions after presenting the evidence. My own reasoning lies in the comparison with robots, because in the physically deterministic model there is no means of internally defined control. Every event is pre determined according to the laws of physics, which are outside the control of any being. So is our conscious mind deluded into thinking it has control over itself? Or is there something else within the conscious mind which can facilitate control? If you assume that everything within us must comply with the current human knowledge of scientific discovery, the conclusion will probably be that we are deluded and our apparent control is "just the way it seems". But my mind concludes that our apparent freedom to choose is real, not an illusion.
AAAAAARRRRRRGGGGGGGGHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!
OK, I feel better now. Do you remember that I have explained to you several times now and veeeeery clearly that this issue
has nothing to do with the content of a particular claim? That is, the issue is to do with the structure of the argument
regardless of what that argument happens to be about.
What you have done here though is plunged straight back into the
content of a specific claim, which has no relevance whatever to the point being made.
The
argumentum ad consequentiam involves the general principle that the desirability or otherwise of an outcome tells you nothing about the truth or otherwise of its premise. It goes like this:
- If premise P is true, then outcome O will follow
- I don’t like outcome O
- Therefore P is not true
Can you see why that’s a very bad argument? OK then. Now let’s populate that with your example:
- If the premise “deterministic universe” is true, then “free" will would be illusory
- I don’t like the idea that “free” will is illusory
- Therefore the universe isn’t deterministic
Can you see why it’s
still a very bad argument, and thus that your contention isn’t just an “apparent” fallacy?
See, this actually has nothing at all to do with free will, robots or any other content. The fallacy is merely thinking that the desirability or otherwise of any proposition tells you something about its truth.
Surely it’s sunk in now hasn’t it?
Hasn’t it?