Determinism is the view that given what happened in the distant past (which you and I had nothing to do with) the future is inevitable. Such past events can simply be the positions of the material particles in the universe as of, say, July 13, 1950 at 12:13 AM Pacific Daylight Time. Or the set of past event could include choices God might have made to predetermine that such and such will happen. Whether it's physical or divine, given that past state, the future is inevitable. If you play a CD with Ariana Grande's music, you will hear her songs the same way every time you play it, and you won't hear Demi Lovato instead. It's predetermined.
This is a blog to discuss philosophy, chess, politics, C. S. Lewis, or whatever it is that I'm in the mood to discuss.
Saturday, July 13, 2024
The consequences of determinsm
Wednesday, July 10, 2024
How did the argument from evil get to be strong?
From C. S Lewis;
It would be an error to reply that our ancestors were
ignorant and therefore entertained pleasing illusions about nature which the
progress of science has since dispelled. For centuries, during which all men
believed, the nightmare size and emptiness of the universe was already known.
You will read in some books that the men of the Middle Ages thought the Earth
flat and the stars near, but that is a lie. Ptolemy had told them that the
Earth was a mathematical point without size in relation to the distance of the
fixed stars—a distance which one mediƦval popular text estimates as
a hundred and seventeen million miles. And in times yet
earlier, even from the beginnings, men must have got the same sense of hostile
immensity from a more obvious source. To prehistoric man the neighbouring
forest must have been infinite enough, and the utterly alien and infest which
we have to fetch from the thought of cosmic rays and cooling suns, came
snuffing and howling nightly to his very doors. Certainly at all periods the
pain and waste of human life was equally obvious. Our own religion begins among
the Jews, a people squeezed between great warlike empires, continually defeated
and led captive, familiar as Poland or Armenia with the tragic story of the conquered.
It is mere nonsense to put pain among the discoveries of science. Lay down this
book and reflect for five minutes on the fact that all the great religions were
first preached, and long practised, in a world without chloroform.