Filip Sandor
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2004
- Messages
- 259
Determinism continued...
The purpose of this thread is to better understand what determinism is vs. randomness and hopefully to get some insight into the concept of free will.
As in the case of any theory, we should start off fresh by defining some of the terms relating to what we are debating.

At www.dictionary.com - determinism is defined as: The philosophical doctrine that every state of affairs, including every human event, act, and decision is the inevitable consequence of antecedent states of affairs.
I believe it is ok to substitute "every state of affairs" with "all physical states" along with appropriate changes corresponding in the rest of the definition so that we are talking strictly, without a doubt physics. The new definition would read as follows, determinism is: the philosophical doctrine that all phyiscal states, including every human event, act, [and decision] is the inevitable consequence of antecedent physical states.
Please correct me if you feel this definition is not appropriate. If you agree with it, then please read on...
The way I understand it, according to this definition of determinism (referring to the second definition), the physical state of the Universe now as a whole is a direct consequence of the physical state of the Universe as a whole before "now".
Thought experiment:
In a Universe with only three moving parts A, B and C - we observe that A and B are two metal spheres of equal size and weight, moving around in a hollow, glass ring C where A is moving forward ----> and hitting a motionless B, transferring all of it's momentum perfectly and in turn B then moves forward ----> and hits A, the process continues on indefinately inside C.
Since in physics we understand that no energy is lost or created, let us assume all three parts in our hypothetical Universe are frictionless.
What we can conclude from this model is that at all times, the physical state of this Universe is a direct result of the prior physical state of this Universe and as such, in a deterministic model, the same principle applies to all it's moving parts. However, while we know with certainty where A got it's momentum from, as it whirls around in the glass pipe and where B is about to get it's momentum from, as it sits still waiting to get hit by A we are left clueless as to what initially introduced the momentum that is moving the objects in the ring. In order for the deterministic model to be valid here, we have to assume that the physical momentum driving the motions in the ring between A and B transcends deterministic laws and didn't have to come from a physical source.
These same principles apply in any strictly deterministic model and this same analogy can be drawn for the real Universe, only that the real Universe has more "moving parts," which we can't observe all at once. However, for the simple, three part model I just described we can't claim that the Universe is just too complex for us to understand and therefore, determinism can still be right. In this model, determinism is not compatible with it's own principles and we have to accept it as flawed or re-define what we mean by determinism.
This is probably a good starting point anyway..
Edited to ad: Maybe part of the problem in this definition of determinism is in the use of the term consequence with referrence to each physical state being a direct result of something before it, suggesting the existence of an Alpha cause for everything or an "infinite string" of causes leading into the past with no definite beginning... either way it should probably be re-defined because it's in conflict with a lot of, current, cosmological theories.
The purpose of this thread is to better understand what determinism is vs. randomness and hopefully to get some insight into the concept of free will.
As in the case of any theory, we should start off fresh by defining some of the terms relating to what we are debating.

At www.dictionary.com - determinism is defined as: The philosophical doctrine that every state of affairs, including every human event, act, and decision is the inevitable consequence of antecedent states of affairs.
I believe it is ok to substitute "every state of affairs" with "all physical states" along with appropriate changes corresponding in the rest of the definition so that we are talking strictly, without a doubt physics. The new definition would read as follows, determinism is: the philosophical doctrine that all phyiscal states, including every human event, act, [and decision] is the inevitable consequence of antecedent physical states.
Please correct me if you feel this definition is not appropriate. If you agree with it, then please read on...
The way I understand it, according to this definition of determinism (referring to the second definition), the physical state of the Universe now as a whole is a direct consequence of the physical state of the Universe as a whole before "now".
Thought experiment:
In a Universe with only three moving parts A, B and C - we observe that A and B are two metal spheres of equal size and weight, moving around in a hollow, glass ring C where A is moving forward ----> and hitting a motionless B, transferring all of it's momentum perfectly and in turn B then moves forward ----> and hits A, the process continues on indefinately inside C.
Since in physics we understand that no energy is lost or created, let us assume all three parts in our hypothetical Universe are frictionless.
What we can conclude from this model is that at all times, the physical state of this Universe is a direct result of the prior physical state of this Universe and as such, in a deterministic model, the same principle applies to all it's moving parts. However, while we know with certainty where A got it's momentum from, as it whirls around in the glass pipe and where B is about to get it's momentum from, as it sits still waiting to get hit by A we are left clueless as to what initially introduced the momentum that is moving the objects in the ring. In order for the deterministic model to be valid here, we have to assume that the physical momentum driving the motions in the ring between A and B transcends deterministic laws and didn't have to come from a physical source.
These same principles apply in any strictly deterministic model and this same analogy can be drawn for the real Universe, only that the real Universe has more "moving parts," which we can't observe all at once. However, for the simple, three part model I just described we can't claim that the Universe is just too complex for us to understand and therefore, determinism can still be right. In this model, determinism is not compatible with it's own principles and we have to accept it as flawed or re-define what we mean by determinism.
This is probably a good starting point anyway..
Edited to ad: Maybe part of the problem in this definition of determinism is in the use of the term consequence with referrence to each physical state being a direct result of something before it, suggesting the existence of an Alpha cause for everything or an "infinite string" of causes leading into the past with no definite beginning... either way it should probably be re-defined because it's in conflict with a lot of, current, cosmological theories.