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  • Crash Course Philosophy is brought to you by Squarespace.

  • Squarespace: share your passion with the world.

  • Let’s say, for the sake of argument, that you love your father.

  • By which I mean, you want him to be alive.

  • And let’s also assume that you don’t have any attachments to your mother that you might describe as... romantic.

  • Well, guess who thought felt the same way about his parents? Oedipus.

  • According to ancient Greek legend, when Oedipus was born,

  • a prophecy foretold that he would kill his father and marry his mother.

  • So his father left baby Oedipus in the wilderness, assuming he would die,

  • and the prophecy would then not come true.

  • But instead, the abandoned baby was discovered and raised by another family.

  • As an adult, Oedipus learned of the prophecy that he would kill his father and marry his mother.

  • So, not knowing he was adopted, he left his adoptive parents in order to avoid fulfilling that prophecy,

  • figuring that if he wasn’t near them, it couldn’t come true.

  • Lo and behold, as he was trying to flee his fate, Oedipus killed a stranger in a fit of rage,

  • who turned out to be the father he had never met.

  • He then proceeded to marry the dead man’s widow,

  • who was actually his mother, though he didn’t know it.

  • Needless to say, this is a fate that, needless to say, any of us would like to avoid.

  • But for philosophers, the whole point of the story of Oedipus is: there is no escaping fate.

  • [Theme Music]

  • Are we free?

  • I mean, on the one hand, most of us have the clear sense that we are.

  • We feel free.

  • We feel like we make all sorts of decisions that lead to both beliefs and actions that are wholly of our own choosing.

  • Like, I could do that.

  • I had oatmeal this morning because I felt like it.

  • This viewthat humans are capable of entirely free actionsis known as libertarian free will.

  • And to be clear, libertarian free will is nothing like political libertarianism.

  • Both views get their name from the word liberty,

  • but political libertarians are all about freedom from government intervention,

  • while people who accept libertarian free will could be anything from political libertarians to socialists.

  • They just think that, metaphysically, we can act freely.

  • So a lot of us figure that our thoughts and actions are free.

  • But, most of us also believe that every effect has a cause,

  • And that everything that happens now, in the present,

  • is the necessary result of events that occurred in the past.

  • This view is known as hard determinism.

  • And many of the people watching this probably think that they believe in both things;

  • that many of your actions are free, and that the world is governed by cause and effect.

  • But, it turns out, you can’t rationally hold both views.

  • Because, traditionally, libertarians have defined free actions according to what’s known as the Principle of Alternate Possibilities.

  • That might sound like the plot device for a sci-fi show,

  • but this principle says that an action is free only if the agent

  • that is, the person doing the thingcould have done otherwise.

  • So, truly free actions require options.

  • Determinism, by contrast, doesn’t allow options.

  • It holds that every event is caused by a previous event.

  • Which means that an agent can never have done anything other than what they did,

  • and therefore, they are never free.

  • But let’s look at these two options more closely.

  • And also, let’s look at my breakfast.

  • Libertarianism says that my decision to eat oatmeal this morning

  • wasn’t necessarily caused by anything that happened before it.

  • Instead, it could have been the result of non-physical events

  • specifically, my own thoughtsthat originated right at that point.

  • I ate oatmeal because I decided to eat oatmeal!

  • End of story.

  • But libertarianism runs counter to what we know about the workings of the physical world,

  • with one thing causing another.

  • So libertarians need a way to account for their view.

  • One way they do that is by making a distinction between what’s known as event causation, and agent causation.

  • Event causation means that no physical event can occur without having been caused by a previous physical event.

  • So, many libertarians concede that the physical world itself is deterministic.

  • Like, a baseball is flying through the air because someone hit that ball with a bat.

  • But many libertarians also argue that there’s such a thing as agent causation,

  • which says that an agent – a being propelled by a mind

  • can start a whole chain of causality that wasn’t caused by anything else.

  • So, the person who hit the ball most likely did so because they just decided to do it.

  • By this logic, agents have the ability to affect the causal chain of the universe.

  • They can make stuff happen on their own.

  • But, many philosophers find this idea untenable.

  • Where would these free decisions, the ones that launch entirely new causal chains, come from, they ask?

  • Are they simply random?

  • What would compel an agent to make one decision, and not another?

  • And if you can answer those questionsif you can explain what would cause an agent to act

  • Then well, youve just reinforced the position that actions are caused, rather than free.

  • The fact is, it’s pretty difficult to find arguments that support libertarian free will.

  • The best argument in favor of it seems to be that it just feels an awful lot like were free.

  • And libertarians argue that we shouldn’t discount the legitimacy of our own personal, subjective experiences

  • so if we feel so free, we should seriously consider the possibility that we are.

  • That point has a certain intuitive appeal.

  • But if you can’t come up with an argument to defend your feeling,

  • then good philosophical reasoning recommends that you reject it,

  • or at least withhold judgment until you can get some evidence together.

  • So now let’s see if the hard determinists can do any better.

  • 18th century French philosopher Baron D’Holbach said that none of our actions are actually free.

  • D’Holbach believed that everything that’s happening right now is the result of an unbroken chain of events.

  • Everything, he said, is the inevitable result of what came before.

  • Including everything that we do!

  • Our actions are caused in the same way that, say, home runs are caused by bats hitting balls,

  • or tornadoes are caused by warm air systems hitting cool air systems in the right conditions.

  • This means that humans and our actions are just part of the physical world, bound by its physical laws.

  • This belief is often explained through a view known as reductionism.

  • Reductionism is the view that all parts of the world, and of our own experience,

  • can be traced backor reduced downto one singular thing.

  • So, for example, you see your mind as being capable of making free decisions.

  • You think that what goes on in your head when you make a choice is not at all like bats and balls.

  • But, well, mental states are brain states, or at least theyre tied directly to your brain.

  • And brain states are biological.

  • And biological states are physical states.

  • And the physical worldas we already saidis deterministic.

  • There’s just no room for free will in this picture.

  • We think were free - but were not.

  • And really, as scientific thinkers, why would we assume that we are?

  • Why would we think that were any different than everything else in the universe?

  • What would make us so special?

  • Libertarians are right that it’s really hard to disregard the feeling of freedom.

  • If I didn’t choose to eat oatmeal this morning, why do I feel like I did?

  • And what made me do it?

  • But hard determinists say that the difference between the causes of human actions

  • and the causes of physical eventslike a bat hitting a ball

  • is that our actions have all sorts of invisible causes that happen in our brains.

  • Specifically, when beliefs team up with our desires and our temperament, they say, you get a deliberate human action.

  • Combine my belief that oatmeal is nutritious, with my desire for healthy nourishment,

  • and the temperament that predisposes me to enjoy warm, carby comfort foods,

  • and ta-da! – you get oatmealy breakfast!

  • Now, you might argue that those particular beliefs, desires, and temperaments

  • might lead to any number of breakfast choicescream of wheat, maybe, or some granola.

  • But, if you dig deep enough, you’d see that there are factors that rule out those options

  • as well as every other option.

  • Maybe I’m a little worried about one of my fillings coming loose,

  • so I’m shying away from the granola because it’s too crunchy.

  • Or I just don’t think about cream of wheat very often.

  • I mean, they don’t have very good brand awareness anymore.

  • What even is cream of wheat exactly?

  • And the oatmeal is sitting right there in front of me.

  • Or maybe I think briefly of making one of those quinoa breakfast bowls that are so hip right now.

  • But my lazy temperament, or my belief that I’m running late,

  • pushes me to choose the 90-seconds-in-the-microwave option.

  • See how it works?

  • All you have to do is change one factor

  • – a belief, desire, or temperamentand youll get a different outcome.

  • Hard determinists argue that, just because we can’t pinpoint the exact factors that

  • led us to an action, we could, in theory isolate them

  • if we knew enough about all the beliefs, desires, and temperaments swirling around in our brains.

  • So, in this view, what we calldecisionsare really just the inevitable results of a bunch of mental stuff combining in just the right way.

  • And maybe it feels free. But it’s not.

  • But hold up! Isn’t there some way out of this?

  • Like, what if I have someone choose my breakfast for me?

  • Or what if I fall back on randomness, by, like, flipping a coin?

  • After all, if I just flipped a coin, then it wouldn’t look like that decision was made by beliefs, desires, and temperaments.

  • But, well, no such luck.

  • Because even if I thought I chose randomly, my decision to flip the coin,

  • or who I asked to pick for me, was just as determined as everything else.

  • And guess what!

  • If youre getting angry right now about me telling you none of your choices are free,

  • well, that anger was determined!

  • If youre finding this whole topic confusing, or boring yepstill determined.

  • You think you can just freely choose to stop playing this video, but if youre still

  • watching me, good news: that’s determined too!

  • Determinists believe that you can’t help but feel and react the way youre reacting right now.

  • You can think youre choosing to act in ways that conform to the character that youve

  • selected and shaped for yourself, but even thatchoiceis the result of all sorts

  • of already-determined factors about you and your place in the world.

  • Hard determinism is tough to refute.

  • And it has some really uncomfortable implications.

  • It means the deeply held feeling most of us have that we actually make free decisions?

  • Is just wrong.

  • And the whole concept of personal responsibility is thrown out the window, too.

  • As D’Holbach put it, were all justcogs in a machine,”

  • doing what we were always meant to do, with no actual volition.

  • Oedipus had to kill his dad and marry his mom.

  • I had to eat the oatmeal.

  • And you? You just had to keep watching! You couldn’t turn away!

  • Today we learned about libertarian free will and it’s counterpoint, hard determinism.

  • Next time, well see if some middle ground can be found between determinism and libertarianism.

  • And I sure hope there can be.

  • Today's episode of Crash Course Philosophy was inevitably made possible by Squarespace.

  • Squarespace is a way to create a website, blog or online store for you and your ideas.

  • Squarespace features a user-friendly interface, custom templates and 24/7 customer support.

  • Try Squarespace at squarespace.com/crashcourse for a special offer.

  • Squarespace: share your passion with the world.

  • Crash Course Philosophy is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios.

  • You can head over to their channel and check out a playlist of the latest episodes from shows like

  • Coma Niddy, Deep Look, and First Person.

  • This episode of Crash Course was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio

  • with the help of these awesome people and our equally fantastic graphics team is Thought Cafe.

Crash Course Philosophy is brought to you by Squarespace.

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    羅紹桀 發佈於 2016 年 08 月 25 日
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