this post was submitted on 21 Jan 2026
120 points (98.4% liked)

memes

23647 readers
102 users here now

dank memes

Rules:

  1. All posts must be memes and follow a general meme setup.

  2. No unedited webcomics.

  3. Someone saying something funny or cringe on twitter/tumblr/reddit/etc. is not a meme. Post that stuff in /c/slop

  4. Va*sh posting is haram and will be removed.

  5. Follow the code of conduct.

  6. Tag OC at the end of your title and we'll probably pin it for a while if we see it.

  7. Recent reposts might be removed.

  8. Tagging OC with the hexbear watermark is praxis.

  9. No anti-natalism memes. See: Eco-fascism Primer

founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
 
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] NewOldGuard@lemmy.ml 2 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I come from a CS and math background so I apologize for misusing the terminology, it’s more in line with how I’d use it in a CS environment. By determinism I was definitely referring to Laplacian determinism by your definitions.

I do not understand the diatribe you included about religious cultists tricking me; I’m an atheist myself and these are arguments I’ve come to appreciate from the perspective of my own understanding of the science and physics, and reading the arguments published in the field of modern philosophy. And a lot of my perspective is informed by experience: it’s a separate argument, but I experience the act of decision making every day, and watch others do the same. Free will seems self evident from the perspective of exercising it day to day. But I digress. It was just a strange and rude inclusion that doesn’t actually make any point.

While we can model stochastic systems as probabilities, these are statistical models and are indeterminate, we know that there is uncertainty in our ability to predict quantum particles’ properties. I’m not a physicist so I can’t make strong claims about hidden variable theories, I’m only familiar with the more basic levels of quantum mechanics; I learned the Copenhagen interpretation, Schrödinger equation, and the uncertainty principle, that level of knowledge. My only understanding of Bell’s theorem is that it disproves local hidden variables. I think the mathematical structure of these laws remains relevant to the debate though, because it negates the logical conclusion of our universe as a mechanical, pre-set system of events, at least by this level of understanding. If non local hidden variable theories pan out as better predictors and prove uncertainty to be irrelevant then I’ll shift my perspective, but I’ve not seen great arguments for pilot waves over the more standard quantum models.

I’d also like to point out that nomological determinism is not inherently at odds with free will. I think most modern philosophers are compatibilists on some level, having some type of deterministic view of the universe while simultaneously arguing for free will. I believe the perspective I’m coming from would meet this definition too, now that you’ve introduced me to more thorough terminology for what I’m actually arguing.

This is all well outside of my expertise as I’m not a physicist or a philosopher. I’m just sharing my perspective as a relative layman

[–] pcalau12i@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 4 days ago

I do not understand the diatribe you included about religious cultists tricking me

was clearly talking specifically about people who mislead others about Bell's theorem. You seem to have interpreted what I said. It was not generally applicable statement regarding all of your viewpoints you hold, but a specific viewpoint which is misrepresented in the popular media. I think rather than taking my warning seriously, you misinterpreted my warning as a personal attack even though it wasn't talking about you but people who may mislead you with false claims like "Bell's theorem rules out hidden variables," which it doesn't, but is commonly statement as if it were fact.

I think the mathematical structure of these laws remains relevant to the debate though, because it negates the logical conclusion of our universe as a mechanical, pre-set system of events, at least by this level of understanding.

My only point was that is ultimately a philosophical position and is not "proven." Something like pilot wave theory makes all the same predictions as orthodox quantum mechanics yet is "mechanical." Yes, if you want to argue that we currently don't have a good reason to believe in anything beyond quantum mechanics and so we should take it as the final word for now, then the universe clearly is not "mechanical" but obeys certain stochastic laws (I guess unless someone believe in MWI but I have my own criticisms of that). My point was less that the orthodox formulation of QM is not stochastic but that it's not proven the universe cannot be deterministic in the Laplacian sense. There isn't a no-go theorem that rules it out as a possibility, so technically if someone was convinced for philosophical reasons that the universe is deterministic then you can't prove them wrong.

At best you could give philosophical arguments as to why you think that is a less reasonable belief, maybe by invoking Occam's razor or something, but they may have a rebuttal for that. Tim Maudlin for example is a major philosophy who upholds that the universe is mechanical and has rebuttals to the Occam's razor argument. For example, he criticizes how to count complexity so he argues pilot wave is not inherently more complicated, and he also criticizes other interpretations that stick with the orthodox formalism as not making philosophical sense and thus justifies the change in formalism based on logical consistency.

Not saying I agree with those arguments just pointing out that they exist, and so we should be more careful than to say it is definitely proven that there are no hidden variables.

I’d also like to point out that nomological determinism is not inherently at odds with free will. I think most modern philosophers are compatibilists on some level

Yes, you're right, I should have specified that I was talking about non-compatibilist free will. Personally, I think compatibilism is just word games. I don't like the idea of redefining free will to make it compatible with determinism. It just confuses the discussion. But that is just me, I guess.