Determinism: Can Scientific Explanations Explain Human Behaviour?

In summary: The idea of determinism has been around for centuries and while it is still a hot topic in academic circles there is very little evidence to support it.
  • #36
disregardthat said:
I'm sorry, I deleted the post before I was about to edit it.

Answering your post: Probability is a degree of confidence, but a possibility is an event that could happen. Why is it wrong to say that I could lift my arms in the air? Is this not a possibility even if I choose not to?

The problem is defining the terms. It is a possibility but whether or not you will or won't do it is determined. For example; I could eat something I don't like but if I'm offered a choice between my favourite meal and the one I detest the most In reality I'm never going to pick the last. So whilst it is feasible that I could eat the last it will never happen. It's the confusing part of this is the definition; what does possibility mean in a deterministic system? What does free mean in a deterministic system? What is will? What does free will mean in a random system?
 
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  • #37
What is the will?

This coming down to he mind body distinction again. But, even if we were to say that the mind is the brain, then that wouldn't explain everything that goes on in the brain.
 
  • #38
disregardthat said:
I'm sorry, I deleted the post before I was about to edit it.

Answering your post: A probability is a degree of confidence, but a possibility is an event that could happen. Why is it wrong to say that I could lift my arms in the air? Is this not a possibility even if I choose not to? See that whether my actions are predetermined or not does not come into question. It is a psychological thing.

Again, why is physical causality a constrain on the will? What does it constrain?
First, I would say that if one takes a purely deterministic point of view, the train of thought of a mind is just as determined as any other 'physical' thing. You strongly imply that thought is purely thought, as you put it a psychological thing.
There was an interresting series on BBC a few years ago on conciousness. I just dug up the dvd copy of the vcr I made of the one show I caught, which dates the show to more than 10 years ago.
In it Professor Susan Greenfield, hosting the show was hooked up with a 'cap' of measuring electrical activity in her brain. All she was required to do was make a decision and then follow through with this decision. In this case it was trying to randomly pick one of two keys on the keyboard and then decide the moment to actually press the keyboard. The 'moment' that she pressed the key was over 2 seconds after brain activity indicated preparation for muscular movement. Her 'decision' of when to press the key had already taken place. Dr. Patrick Haggard, University College, London conducted experiments of this type.
In another portion split brain subjects,-radical treatment for epilepsy, saw two different words- one by each eye. Only one set of words was 'seen' but when the subjects were asked to draw a picture of the word they invariably drew a picture that meshed the meaning of both words -for example "glass" was 'seen' but "hour" was 'not seen' but they drew an hourglass. When asked to explain why they drew the hourglass, they made no reference to it 'probably' being conected to the 'unseen' word, instead they explained that they remembered talking recently about time and their watch and the hourglass idea just 'came to mind'. Prof. Michel Gazzaniga, Dartmouth College New Hampshire, conducted these type of experiments.
Conciousness is predominantly just a story teller, making our world-view remain 'consistent' and manageable.
Concious control of actions inevitably get's in the way of any type of performance,be it an athlete, musician for example. The vast majority of our day to day life is predominantly unconcious.
Conciousness is directly asociated with the verbal side of the brain (the left hemisphere). This conversation could be said to involve conscious behavior. In the end though, what makes any conversation 'interesting' for each individual are the ideas that 'come to mind'.
mathal
 
  • #39
mathal said:
In it Professor Susan Greenfield, hosting the show was hooked up with a 'cap' of measuring electrical activity in her brain. All she was required to do was make a decision and then follow through with this decision. In this case it was trying to randomly pick one of two keys on the keyboard and then decide the moment to actually press the keyboard. The 'moment' that she pressed the key was over 2 seconds after brain activity indicated preparation for muscular movement. Her 'decision' of when to press the key had already taken place. Dr. Patrick Haggard, University College, London conducted experiments of this type.

This is called the Libert's delay and is an interesting example of epiphenomenalism.
 
  • #40
Yes, I am familiar with the type of experiments which makes the observer capable of predicting behavior before the subject is aware of his choices. But in what sense is this capability of predicting the choice a constraint on the will of the subject? Why do we dismiss it as free? As I see it, the problem is the idea that the will is affected by physical causes. What is affected?

I do insist on that the idea of the will as free is problematic, but not because it is contradicted by physical causality.

The main points are these:
Can we imagine the will as free? Can we give an example of a free willed action? If not, what are we arguing against, and why does determinism matter?
 
  • #41
disregardthat said:
Can we imagine the will as free? Can we give an example of a free willed action? If not, what are we arguing against, and why does determinism matter?

I don't understand the questions. We act as if we have a free will. Why not assume that it is.
 
  • #42
Willowz said:
I don't understand the questions. We act as if we have a free will. Why not assume that it is.

If you believe

1) The mechanisms of the brain is the entire cause of behavior in human beings

and critically

2) This makes free will impossible

then the questions are perfectly valid.

If not, please explain why our will is free (I agree).
 
  • #43
disregardthat said:
1) The mechanisms of the brain is the entire cause of behavior in human beings

and critically

2) This makes free will impossible

then the questions are perfectly valid.

If not, please explain why our will is free (I agree).
That's a dishonest conclusion. Nobody yet knows the entire mechanisms of the brain. The conclusion is unwarranted.
 
  • #44
Willowz said:
That's a dishonest conclusion. Nobody yet knows the entire mechanisms of the brain. The conclusion is unwarranted.

This is not the place to throw out the "we can't know for certain" cliché. We know enough to conclude that it is indeed the mechanisms of the brain that causes all muscular movement for example.
 
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  • #45
We don't need to know the "entire mehanism" of the brain, we just need to know that every mechanism so far (memory, perception, prediction) has followed the same rational course that every other scientific study has. Big surprise.
 
  • #46
Pythagorean said:
We don't need to know the "entire mehanism" of the brain, we just need to know that every mechanism so far (memory, perception, prediction) has followed the same rational course that every other scientific study has. Big surprise.

I don't mean to be abrasive, but what do you mean by "rational course", that almost sounds like some scientific dogmatism.
 
  • #47
Willowz said:
I don't mean to be abrasive, but what do you mean by "rational course", that almost sounds like some scientific dogmatism.

Er...what? Why do you think that rational investigation is dogma :confused:
 
  • #48
Let's discuss determinism. And I'd first like an answer for proponents of determinism: What does it mean that something is determined? If an event A happens, why was A determined?
 
  • #49
disregardthat said:
Let's discuss determinism. And I'd first like an answer for proponents of determinism: What does it mean that something is determined? If an event A happens, why was A determined?

Because of causality. The determinist principle is that cause and effect are absolute. Therefore everything that happens is contingent on the past, in other words every atom of your and your environment's existence is governed by physical laws through time. Considering this the determinist would argue that we have no "free will" because there is no such thing as choice. Instead everything that happens is inevitable. So for a determinist the idea of "choice" is moot.

Compatibilism takes a different stance by saying that even in a deterministic universe free will is still possible. This is because whilst our choices may be inevitable we still make them and we still have the concept of choice. In other words we have the free will to make choices even if the choices we make are ultimately determined.

At the other end of the spectrum is metaphysical libertarianism. There's many schools of thought here but ultimately the argument is that there is something about an intelligent agent that is not subject to the same rules as the everything else. Many metaphysical libertarian ideas stem from the idea that there is something more than the physical world and that having a mind means that human beings are exempt from cause and effect when it comes to free will. Obviously this view is the one most favoured by religionists.
 
  • #50
ryan_m_b said:
Er...what? Why do you think that rational investigation is dogma :confused:
That's not what I meant. But, let me clarify. Scientists have operated on the principle of sufficient reason as a sort of pragmatic "code of conduct" (no mysticism). I think, people interested in science happen to believe in this blindly (science as some sort of religion). But, the people who actually do science nowadays would know better.

Leibniz's view said:
For every entity x, if x exists, then there is a sufficient explanation why x exists.
For every event e, if e occurs, then there is a sufficient explanation why e occurs.
For every proposition p, if p is true, then there is a sufficient explanation why p is true.
 
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  • #51
Let me go off the deep end here.

Say the mind operated on the quantum level in some respect. So, if quantum mechanics is not deterministic, then so isn't the mind and the resulting will. But, this is just speculation which I suspect won't be taken seriously.
 
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  • #52
Willowz said:
Let me go off the deep end here.

Say the mind operated on the quantum level in some respect. So, if quantum mechanics is not deterministic, then so isn't the mind and the resulting will. But, this is just speculation which I don't suspect to be taken seriously.

Taking into account quantum aspects then determinism changes from strictly deterministic to probabilistic. Either way it doesn't get around the fact that "will" is the result of uncontrolled cause.
 
  • #53
ryan_m_b said:
Taking into account quantum aspects then determinism changes from strictly deterministic to probabilistic. Either way it doesn't get around the fact that "will" is the result of uncontrolled cause.
The mere existence of a possibility that can be acted upon, gives rise to a free will.
 
  • #54
ryan_m_b said:
Because of causality. The determinist principle is that cause and effect are absolute. Therefore everything that happens is contingent on the past, in other words every atom of your and your environment's existence is governed by physical laws through time.

This is the answer I had hoped for.

I believe there is a grave mistake in this type of view.

Causality is the relationship between physical events. But what are such relationships? This can only be answered by referring to physical models. But models are descriptions, with built-in rules for inference. (e.g. Newtons laws of mechanics) The inferences are logical. Thus causality is simply a logical connection between descriptions of events, but has no fundamental connection to the physical world (other than that it is what that is described).

Models need not be mathematical models; the physical models we are familiar with. They can be simple (even primitive) forms of expressing relationships between events.

Just as the only necessity that exists is logical necessity, so too the only impossibility that exists is logical impossibility.

- Wittgenstein

You mention as an explanation (or example) of causality as the interaction between atoms. This is certainly correct, but in the proper manner of in the context of the models we have for atoms. I don't propose that we "just haven't got deep enough in the physics", nor that "causality is found at the "deepest" level of natural laws".

However, it seems to be very clear that what happens is inevitable. But this does not depend on causality. Rather, what is the meaning of the word inevitable? When do we use it, and why? If an event has happened, of course it is inevitable. This is actually a tautology. But can we ever say that an event is inevitable if it has not happened? Not by far. (We can predict the future to a certain degree, but the predictions are interpretations of the logical implications within a model for the phenomena we are describing, not carrying any fundamental connection with the actual physical phenomena).

The use of the word inevitable is misplaced in this context. "Everything that happened was inevitable" is meaningless (unless it is used in the fashion that we expected it to happen with great certainty, which is not what is meant by inevitability here). It is a linguistic error, it seems obvious since it always is obvious whenever used correctly. But a subtle change in the logical place of the word (unnoticably) lead us into believing it with absolute certainty.

Don't interpret this as me saying that everything is random (or worse: stochastic). I'm saying that determinism as a stance is an error of language, not of ontology (and that it is meaningless as an ontological fact).

The only reasonable use of the word deterministic as I can see is "a deterministic model".
 
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  • #55
Willowz said:
The mere existence of a possibility that can be acted upon, gives rise to a free will.

The probability comes from quantum effects only. I.e. a dropped ball may hit the ground or may just disappear (with a 1/1^10^10^10^10 chance). The fact that there are possibilities based on the chances that a quantum event may go one way or another does not change the fact that at macroscale levels everything is mechanical.

Another way of putting it is this:

I will flip a coin
If it is heads I will say "yes"
If it is tails I will say "no"

Let's propose this is a quantum coin. Regardless of how it goes I haven't really made a choice. The decision to partake in this endeavour and decide it's parameters was caused by all the phenomenon in my past. So in reality even with randomness the deterministic argument against free will holds.
 
  • #56
Ah. Makes sense. So, determinism implies an observer that cannot be within the deterministic system to call it deterministic. Truly, incoherent.
 
  • #57
disregardthat said:
But can we ever say that an event is inevitable if it has not happened? Not by far. (We can predict the future to a certain degree, but the predictions are interpretations of the logical implications within a model for the phenomena we are describing, not carrying any fundamental connection with the actual physical phenomena).

There is a great problem with the semantics of this issue. However I disagree with this statement partially. Arguably the future is inevitable in the sense that there are a number of possible futures with different likelihoods born out of the fundamental probabilistic nature of the universe. For example, it is most like that if I throw a rock at my neighbours window it is most likely that it will break and my neighbour will call the police. There is a smaller chance that my rock will phase right through the house, this will cause different effects i.e. my neighbour will never know what I tried to do.

Regardless of if the universe is fundamentally deterministic or not the argument still stands that "free will" in the sense of being able to take any path available is fallacious.
 
  • #58
Willowz said:
Ah. Makes sense. So, determinism implies an observer that cannot be within the deterministic system to call it deterministic. Truly, incoherent.

Sorry? I don't get how you concluded this.
 
  • #59
ryan_m_b said:
The probability comes from quantum effects only. I.e. a dropped ball may hit the ground or may just disappear (with a 1/1^10^10^10^10 chance). The fact that there are possibilities based on the chances that a quantum event may go one way or another does not change the fact that at macroscale levels everything is mechanical.

Another way of putting it is this:

I will flip a coin
If it is heads I will say "yes"
If it is tails I will say "no"

Let's propose this is a quantum coin. Regardless of how it goes I haven't really made a choice. The decision to partake in this endeavour and decide it's parameters was caused by all the phenomenon in my past. So in reality even with randomness the deterministic argument against free will holds.
I don't think it's randomness but indeterminacy.
 
  • #60
ryan_m_b said:
Sorry? I don't get how you concluded this.
I was referring to disregardthat previous post. But, I'm getting ahead of myself. Time to shut up.
 
  • #61
Willowz said:
I don't think it's randomness but indeterminacy.

Good spot :smile: I knew something was wrong with my wording.

Also just to note: If I had to choose (pardon the pun) I would say I subscribe to compatiblism. To me it doesn't matter if the universe is strictly deterministic or just probabilistic. Pragmatically we can use the term "free will" to mean making a decision without duress.

Useful links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Determinism
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compatibilism
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertarianism_(metaphysics [Broken])
 
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  • #62
We had a nice https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=478799" (present in the reductionist view). Free will can be defined as a unique type of downward causation, which the mental state can apply over the physical. And by unique is meant a causation, which would not be the same in two identical physical systems. So the physical state would not be able to predetermine it's next state, if it would then "free will" is reduced to simple mental causation. Can we have free will in materialism? I think no, but of course if materialism is true, I am free to think so.
 
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  • #63
ryan_m_b said:
...the idea that there is something more than the physical world and that having a mind means that human beings are exempt from cause and effect when it comes to free will. Obviously this view is the one most favoured by religionists.


I recognise that this thread has moved on considerably from the original question as I posed it, and I do understand that the level of the active discussion is much more genuinely a serious philosophical discussion. I therefore hesitate to drag it back with my more plodding perspective, but I do want to challenge something that Ryan said.

In the context of my own experience of all the frustrations of arguing with the anti-evolution lobby and those prepared to not just challenge but to fly in the face of science, I have cause to be sensitive to the suggestion that my viewpoint is more in accordance with ‘religionists’ than with science. But this is not just about me defending myself from such a suggestion, I think this is an important point. Believe me, though I believe wholeheartedly in the notion of the dignity of human life, I am able to put that aide and make a quietly rational assessment of this question of whether there really is any such thing as free will. As I mentioned further up the thread, where it seems to me to become seriously problematic is in the matter of criminal justice. Whatever your opinions of the proportionality of the sentences, it is clear that the treatment of the recent rioters by British criminal justice is entirely based on the idea that they could have chosen to behave differently, and that the responsibility for the choice they actually made is theirs and not the laws of physics.

But in point of fact, you don’t have to go to that extreme. If my wife asks me to go shopping with her, there is a bunch of conflicting thoughts that might enter my head, surrounding how I would rather spend the time and the knowledge that it would make things easier for her and she is entitled to expect my help and support, that sort of thing, but it seems clear to me that the final decision I take is mine and I could, just as easily have taken the contrary decision. One of the concepts I have encountered in my attempts to get some understanding of quantum physics is this notion of ‘decoherence’. In the case of Schrodinger’s cat, it says that somewhere between the quantum uncertainties of the alpha particle and the macro world of the cat, those quantum uncertainties ‘decohere’ such that the cat is alive until it is dead. Does that concept not allow for the free will of an individual to operate somewhere above the quantum interactions of the particles that make up that individual’s body? I might accept that there is no particular scientific evidence to confirm that, but I don’t accept that it is any way unscientific or supernaturalist to suppose that it might.
 
  • #64
Ken Natton said:
In the context of my own experience of all the frustrations of arguing with the anti-evolution lobby and those prepared to not just challenge but to fly in the face of science, I have cause to be sensitive to the suggestion that my viewpoint is more in accordance with ‘religionists’ than with science. But this is not just about me defending myself from such a suggestion, I think this is an important point. Believe me, though I believe wholeheartedly in the notion of the dignity of human life, I am able to put that aide and make a quietly rational assessment of this question of whether there really is any such thing as free will. As I mentioned further up the thread, where it seems to me to become seriously problematic is in the matter of criminal justice. Whatever your opinions of the proportionality of the sentences, it is clear that the treatment of the recent rioters by British criminal justice is entirely based on the idea that they could have chosen to behave differently, and that the responsibility for the choice they actually made is theirs and not the laws of physics.

Even the strictest of determinists would disagree with this and on this basis: If a person's past affects their future then justice will prevent them from doing it again. They are the product of their environment and whilst their action might have been inevitable it does not change the necessity of justice. Also as I outlined above I'm a compatibilist when it comes to these things so even if your actions are inevitable words like "choice" and "will" are still practical terms.
Ken Natton said:
But in point of fact, you don’t have to go to that extreme. If my wife asks me to go shopping with her, there is a bunch of conflicting thoughts that might enter my head, surrounding how I would rather spend the time and the knowledge that it would make things easier for her and she is entitled to expect my help and support, that sort of thing, but it seems clear to me that the final decision I take is mine and I could, just as easily have taken the contrary decision. One of the concepts I have encountered in my attempts to get some understanding of quantum physics is this notion of ‘decoherence’. In the case of Schrodinger’s cat, it says that somewhere between the quantum uncertainties of the alpha particle and the macro world of the cat, those quantum uncertainties ‘decohere’ such that the cat is alive until it is dead. Does that concept not allow for the free will of an individual to operate somewhere above the quantum interactions of the particles that make up that individual’s body? I might accept that there is no particular scientific evidence to confirm that, but I don’t accept that it is any way unscientific or supernaturalist to suppose that it might.

As far as the evidence shows no decoherence goes on in the brain, this is something that has been put forward by crackpots for a long time trying to explain psychics and the soul (just look up Orch-or). There are two things to respond to in your question, firstly the fact that there are loads of voices in your head arguing different things doesn't mean the outcome was not inevitable. In the same way that a ball falling through a tree can get caught on branches it is just simple physics whether or not it will hit the ground. Secondly even taking into account quantum indeterminacy we don't rescue free will for the reason I outlined above; because now we go from deterministic to probabilistic and in neither case is the mind exempt from cause and effect.
 
  • #65
ryan_m_b said:
...the fact that there are loads of voices in your head arguing different things doesn't mean the outcome was not inevitable. In the same way that a ball falling through a tree can get caught on branches it is just simple physics whether or not it will hit the ground. ... even taking into account quantum indeterminacy we don't rescue free will for the reason I outlined above; because now we go from deterministic to probabilistic and in neither case is the mind exempt from cause and effect.

Well Ryan, I can only say that I find it to be a very melancholy and a very bleak view of life and of humanity. Every instinct in me rebels against such a notion. I suppose I have to accept that is a failure of dispassion on my part.
 
  • #66
Ken Natton said:
Well Ryan, I can only say that I find it to be a very melancholy and a very bleak view of life and of humanity. Every instinct in me rebels against such a notion. I suppose I have to accept that is a failure of dispassion on my part.

It's swings and roundabouts, on the one hand you have no free will but on the other hand you can't tell the difference anyway :smile: If you really want a melancholy output Ken I would advise reading up on epiphenomenalism and experiments like the Libert's delay. It's always nice to know that neuroscience is proving more and more that consciousness is a vestigial organ.
 
  • #67
ryan_m_b said:
It's swings and roundabouts, on the one hand you have no free will but on the other hand you can't tell the difference anyway :smile: If you really want a melancholy output Ken I would advise reading up on epiphenomenalism and experiments like the Libert's delay..


What is it that advises? And what is this "I" you keep referring to? You use consciousness to disprove consciousness? How does that work?

Must be a fun way living in the Matrix, eh?


It's always nice to know that neuroscience is proving more and more that consciousness is a vestigial organ


It's always nice to remind that neuroscientists still have no clue about awareness.
 
  • #68
Maui said:
What is it that advises? And what is this "I" you keep referring to? You use consciousness to disprove consciousness? How does that work?

Must be a fun way living in the Matrix, eh?

Eh? I said nothing about disproving consciousness :confused:
Maui said:
It's always nice to remind that neuroscientists still have no clue about awareness.

Firstly my statement was flippant. Secondly, what evidence are you basing this on exactly?
 
  • #69
ryan_m_b said:
Eh? I said nothing about disproving consciousness :confused:


You made the statement that:

on the one hand you have no free will but on the other hand you can't tell the difference anyway


There is no way to be conscious(self-aware) without freewill and some sense of self. While i can't prove that you are not zombie(as you seem to imply in the above quote), i know that i am not, as i choose my own actions - I can even commit a suicide if i experience an insurmountable emotional pain(emotional pain is inexplicable by today's science as are most of the important questions anyway).


Firstly my statement was flippant. Secondly, what evidence are you basing this on exactly?



What do you know about self-awareness? You seem to be a staunch materialist - can you show me consciousness? Or my rich inner life? What about my thoughts and how are decisions made(and why)? Am i posting this message because of the infinitely low entropy at the time of the BB, which kind of heavily leans towards the idea of a computer simulation as the simplest explanation per the Occam's razor?

Consciousness is quite real, one wouldn't know about materialism and the physical body if it were otherwise.
 
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  • #70
Maui said:
There is no way to be conscious(self-aware) without freewill and some sense of self. While i can't prove that you are not zombie(as you seem to imply in the above quote), i know that i am not, as i choose my own actions - I can even commit a suicide if i experience an insurmountable emotional pain(emotional pain is inexplicable by today's science as are most of the important questions anyway).

Have you read any of this thread? What is your definition of free will and what evidence do you have that it is a necessary part of consciousness (this discussion has little to do with philosophical zombies)? Have you even looked into what I mentioned above regarding epiphenomenalism and the Libert's delay? The fact that you feel like you have free will is no indication that you do. I've already outlined my stance as a compabilist in that I see no evidence that choice and decision making is not constrained by the same mechanical cause and effect that all other processes are government by, however I do think the use of the terms are useful.
Maui said:
What do you know about self-awareness? You seem to be a staunch materialist - can you show me consciousness? Or my rich inner life? What about my thoughts and how are decisions made(and why)? Am i posting this message because of the infinitely low entropy at the time of the BB, which kind of heavily leans towards the idea of a computer simulation as the simplest explanation per the Occam's razor?

Consciousness is quite real, one wouldn't know about materialism and the physical body if it were otherwise.

What you are referring to is the "en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_problem_of_consciousness"[/URL]. In summary "how to mechanical forces give rise to subjective experience"? But this has little to do with free will. I also have no idea why you are bringing entropy into it and why you are making reference to the simulation hypothesis. Could you please be more concise with your posts.

Lastly I can't fathom why you thought I was arguing that consciousness does not exist, I have never said that and it quite obviously does exist. What I have mentioned is the findings of various neuroscience investigations that produced evidence showing that conscious thoughts are not in control of the body and that consciousness is a bye product of the brains decision making.
 
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<h2>1. What is determinism?</h2><p>Determinism is the philosophical belief that all events, including human behavior, are ultimately determined by causes external to the will.</p><h2>2. How does determinism relate to scientific explanations?</h2><p>Determinism is often used in scientific explanations to understand and predict human behavior. It suggests that human behavior is not random, but rather can be explained by underlying causes and laws of nature.</p><h2>3. Can scientific explanations fully explain human behavior?</h2><p>There is ongoing debate about whether scientific explanations can fully explain human behavior. Some argue that there are inherent limitations in scientific methods when it comes to understanding complex human behavior. Others believe that with advancements in technology and research methods, we may eventually have a complete understanding of human behavior.</p><h2>4. What are some criticisms of determinism?</h2><p>One criticism of determinism is that it undermines the concept of free will, as it suggests that all human actions are predetermined and out of our control. Another criticism is that it oversimplifies complex human behavior and does not take into account individual differences and unique experiences.</p><h2>5. Are there any alternative theories to determinism?</h2><p>Yes, there are alternative theories to determinism, such as indeterminism, which suggests that some events, including human behavior, are not determined by prior causes and are instead random. There is also compatibilism, which argues that determinism and free will can coexist and are not mutually exclusive.</p>

1. What is determinism?

Determinism is the philosophical belief that all events, including human behavior, are ultimately determined by causes external to the will.

2. How does determinism relate to scientific explanations?

Determinism is often used in scientific explanations to understand and predict human behavior. It suggests that human behavior is not random, but rather can be explained by underlying causes and laws of nature.

3. Can scientific explanations fully explain human behavior?

There is ongoing debate about whether scientific explanations can fully explain human behavior. Some argue that there are inherent limitations in scientific methods when it comes to understanding complex human behavior. Others believe that with advancements in technology and research methods, we may eventually have a complete understanding of human behavior.

4. What are some criticisms of determinism?

One criticism of determinism is that it undermines the concept of free will, as it suggests that all human actions are predetermined and out of our control. Another criticism is that it oversimplifies complex human behavior and does not take into account individual differences and unique experiences.

5. Are there any alternative theories to determinism?

Yes, there are alternative theories to determinism, such as indeterminism, which suggests that some events, including human behavior, are not determined by prior causes and are instead random. There is also compatibilism, which argues that determinism and free will can coexist and are not mutually exclusive.

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