and if all is predetermined as you suggest, then how can you claim anything to be objective, including the difference between true and false? Or determinism and non-determinism?
In the hypothesised universe, determinism is to be considered objective: it has been premised as being the case.
In the deterministic paradigm, you contend for some unsupported and inexplicable reason, that only one course of action is possible. Therefore there is no ability to consider the veracity of anything as being objectively true or false.
It is neither unsupported nor inexplicable: it is the implication of causal determinism that has been premised.
Causal determinism is the philosophy that all events are
completely determined by previously existing causes.
If a combination of causes (e.g. X+Y) can lead to either output A or output B then those causes do
not completely determine the outcome, and there is no determinism.
Only if the causes can lead to one possible outcome, and always the same outcome, do you have determinism.
Therefore if you start with A (let A denote the entire set of starting conditions) then in a deterministic system the output is completely determined - i.e. set in stone - by A, and can only be output B.
If you start with B... the output can only be C.
If you start with C... the output can only be D.
And so on.
Thus if you start with A, ultimately you end with Z.
There is no alternative in a causally deterministic system.
Thus the path from A to Z is predetermined, it is set in stone as soon as A is the set of inputs to the system.
Your paradigm states that the philosophy of Determinism itself is the product of universal determination there fore has no value as a philosophy. Not true or false but just is, as it was predetermined to be.
Determinism with out self determinism included renders all intellectual endeavor utterly subject to universal starting conditions. Thus purely subjective. Not a shred of objectivity is present or possible.
This doesn't follow.
In a hypothetical universe which is premised as deterministic, the determinism is necessarily objective, otherwise you haven't premised it.
It is objective in as much as, regardless of any subjective view, the universe operates in a deterministic manner.
Being the product of something doesn't negate the thing, nor the truth of the thing.
Furthermore, since self-determinism is simply a subset of the overall deterministic system, it is itself subject to those same starting conditions, as is everything else.
The inclusion of self-determinism doesn't alter this.
You can't escape a deterministic universe through self-determinism, which is what you seem to be claiming (although it is somewhat unclear to me just what you are claiming, so apologies if I have got the wrong end of the stick).
I am not claiming any such thing... self determination is relative to the capacity to learn how to self determine. A baby learning to choose for example between their left or right hand is learning how to determine which hand they wish to move and certainly NOT which atom does what. Self determination is never absolute as you so erroneously hold to. Nor is the quality of freedom that self determination affords the self determiner.
I am amazed that you and others believe the way you do..
I'm not adhering to any absoluteness of self-determination.
I am actually still trying to comprehend what you actually mean by self-determination.
You have claimed, after all: "
Cause and effect...ultimately evolving a human capable of learning how to manage, alter and manipulate that which has been predetermined by the universe."
If something can, as you suggest, learn how to manipulate that which has been predetermined, then how is this
not you suggesting that self-determined actions can override that which the universe predetermines?
An unsupportable claim of only one course of events when there are an infinite potential number of equally predetermined events.
It is not unsupportable, and has been supported above.
The only way to have an infinite number of equally predetermined events is to look at an infinitely long predetermined course of events.
If, however, you think that one moment (A) could lead to either B1 or B2 or B3 then you are no longer talking of a deterministic system.
But this discussion, I thought, was.
How do you logically conclude that there is only one course of events with out using hindsight to conclude as such?
Hindsight has no say on the matter other than to identify that which transpires.
It is simply the premise of causal determinism that leads to the conclusion of a single predetermined course of events:
A deterministic system is one in which a set of inputs can only lead to a certain output, i.e. the same inputs will always lead to that same output.
Not the same set of possible outputs governed by a probability function, but the same specific output.
Therefore if you have A as your input you will always output B.
If you have B you will always output C.
All the way from one letter to the next.
Thus if you start with A there is only one course of events before you: A, B, C, D, E... etc.
If one thinks that it could go A, B, C, G... or A, B, C, D... then you are saying that input C could lead to output D or G.
This is then no longer a deterministic system.
It is wrong, for the explanation already provided.
Ignore that explanation if you want, or don't, but your analysis of what I was saying remains wrong.