Not quite sure what you're saying, but to me it seems like although there are more direct answers to, "Why did I choose a red sweater?" they all distantly stem from the initial conditions of the universe. If all these initial conditions are known, and the universe is known to be deterministic, after a hell of a lot of calculating it could be figured out that I will choose a red sweater. This is different from your government/murder example, as "the government exists" isn't a full answer---that is, it doesn't follow from "The government exists" that "murder is illegal." After all, the government exists and eating peanut butter is legal, so a complete answer would have to include how exactly murder was determined by the government to be bad.Ayatollah So said:Not exactly. That's like saying, "the only reason murder is illegal, is because government exists." Sure, government has to exist for something to be illegal. But that's only one reason, there are others which are more to the point if someone asks "why is murder illegal?" The existence of government is simply a framework against which questions of "legal or illegal?" can be answered. Similarly the possibility of different conditions is a framework against which the question "free or compelled?" can be answered.
Hmm, I suppose that's true. If initial conditions of a deterministic universe could hypothetically be different, there's no reason why nothing else could hypothetically be different.Right. And by the same token, the initial condition of the universe could be different if the current condition were different, or if the final (in a Big Crunch) condition were different, or anywhere in between. The interdependency relations are perfectly symmetric; no metaphysical envy is called for.
But what if nothing could be different? We were talking about the initial conditions of the universe being different, but what if, somehow, the initial conditions followed logically from something, just as the formation of a hurricane follows from low air pressure over warm water? The universe would thus be "closed" to alternate possibilities, and thus hypothetical discussion would be silly. Or do all deterministists hold that, although each cause has just one effect, there is an inititial input of randomness in the universe to get things going, and the universe is thus "open" to alternate possibilities?
But under the conditions that led to Hitler's actions and thoughts, he was destined to launch the Holocaust. There was no supernatural "ghost" (for lack of a better word) of Hitler that input new evil into the world; all the evil followed logically from Hitler's environment.You're right, I regard as unfounded the idea that determinism would prohibit blame. I'd wager that Hitler did actually consider other options - pursuing negotiations with the Allies, changing his staff, changing the German economy - besides just blaming the Jews for every woe of Germany. He just failed to give those alternatives the appraisal they merited. There were reasons why not, but those reasons don't excuse him, because he had enough rationality and intelligence in general to be responsible for his actions.
And now I'm not so sure about my disagreement with those who critique determinism on this. Before, I was thinking that although there's no supernatural ghost of Hitler, Hitler's very natural mind works just as well; it input new evil into the world in the sense that it was one of the conditions that led to Hitler commiting evil. But now I realize that the state of this mind follows logically from everything that Hitler came into contact with ever since his birth plus the conditions of his brain/mind at birth. It's hard to assign Hitler some outside "thing" that brought new evil into the world.
Yeah, you're right; you can't escape determinism.Not "anyway". Argument of what should or should not happen is one of the causal factors, sometimes critical factors, determining action. We are talking about intelligent human beings, after all. Our thoughts and debates matter.