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  • 00:02

    Hey!

  • 00:03

    Britmonkey!

  • 00:04

    Michael here.

  • 00:05

    Have you ever had a refreshing drink of tea?

  • 00:07

    I take mine Black….

  • 00:10

    Mirror is a horror anthology series.

  • 00:13

    In 2018, their episode Bandersnatch was a postmodernist interactive film dealing with

  • 00:19

    themes of free will and decision making.

  • 00:22

    In one scene, the film’s viewer is able to make a choice; destroy a cup of tea, or

  • 00:28

    don’t.

  • 00:30

    Data released by Netflix showed that people who live in countries where tea-drinking is

  • 00:35

    more common, such as Turkey, the United Kingdom, or Ireland, viewers selected this option less

  • 00:42

    often than viewers in countries where tea is not as popular.

  • 00:46

    It would seem that whether we destroy a cup of tea in a video game is determined by where

  • 00:52

    we grow up.

  • 00:53

    Our entire orderly society is based around the idea that we are free to make our own

  • 00:59

    choices, be punished when they are morally wrong, and take praise when they are good

  • 01:03

    decisions.

  • 01:04

    But what if they couldn’t make that choice at all?

  • 01:07

    What if everything we do is just a response to the world around us?

  • 01:11

    What if...free will does not exist?

  • 01:19

    Philosophers have debated this topic for millennia and there are countless branches and theories

  • 01:24

    but ultimately the “determinist argument”, the idea that you don’t have free will,

  • 01:29

    boils down to this: Everything in the universe conforms to the

  • 01:34

    natural laws of the universe; everything has a cause that produces the same outcome every

  • 01:39

    time.

  • 01:40

    You put a spoon in the microwave and it blows up one hundred percent of the time.

  • 01:45

    You mix mentos and coke and it blows up - guaranteed.

  • 01:49

    Why should the human brain be any different?

  • 01:51

    You input sensory information, it undergoes a chemical process in the brain we don’t

  • 01:56

    yet understand, and decisions come out the other end.

  • 02:00

    Every action you take, from picking up a book to deciding what college to go to are the

  • 02:05

    result of neurons firing.

  • 02:08

    Neurons fire in a way determined by the laws of chemistry and physics, which acts the same

  • 02:13

    way every time.

  • 02:15

    You can’t decide if or when a neuron fires.

  • 02:18

    Think of a game of chess.

  • 02:20

    There are trillions of ways to play a single game of chess, but cut that game of chess

  • 02:24

    down to a few pieces and the number of possible outcomes becomes severely limited.

  • 02:28

    This version you see on screen only has seven possible outcomes based on the input of the

  • 02:34

    players.

  • 02:35

    The human brain is just a giant version of a chess board; external inputs go in, result

  • 02:41

    comes out.

  • 02:43

    So you don’t have free will; all of your decisions are just complex chemical brain

  • 02:47

    responses to external stimuli, right?

  • 02:52

    But for philosophers on the opposing side of the debate, this middle bit is the point

  • 02:57

    of contention.

  • 02:58

    We don’t know how the brain works.

  • 03:00

    Who knows what could be happening at this stage.

  • 03:03

    Humans are pretty unique as far as animals go; we can be creative and artistic, we can

  • 03:08

    imagine abstract concepts and four dimensional objects.

  • 03:12

    Why would evolution give us consciousness if that consciousness was useless?

  • 03:18

    Maybe the decision-making mind is separate from the brain, using the brain as some sort

  • 03:23

    of looking glass into the real world.

  • 03:26

    This would make your consciousness exempt from the natural laws of physics and thus

  • 03:30

    able to independently make decisions.

  • 03:32

    There are entire fields of study based on the idea that the universe doesn’t always

  • 03:37

    conform to the laws of physics as we know them.

  • 03:40

    This position is called “Libertarian Free Will”, which has nothing to do with Ron

  • 03:45

    Paul and taxes it just means you are completely free to make your own decisions.

  • 03:49

    There’s also a mystery third position that we’ll get to later but we have to move on;

  • 03:55

    we can argue about philosophy all day as hundreds of other philosophers did for millennia before

  • 04:00

    we discovered: neuroscience!

  • 04:03

    Can we answer the free will question with neuroscience?

  • 04:08

    Most proponents of determinism will point to the work of neuroscientist Benjamin Libet

  • 04:14

    in 1983.

  • 04:16

    Libet asked volunteers – wait if free will isn’t real then technically they weren’t

  • 04:21

    volunteers… whatever.

  • 04:22

    Libet asked participants hooked up to a brain-scanning-machine to stare at a ticking clock and flick their

  • 04:29

    wrist whenever they felt like it.

  • 04:32

    Before they flicked their wrist, Libet instructed them to make a mental note of what time the

  • 04:37

    clock said when they decided to make the action.

  • 04:41

    The results were...kinda spooky.

  • 04:44

    The participant’s brains began the process of contracting the muscles to flick the wrist

  • 04:49

    roughly half a second before the participant said they decided to.

  • 04:54

    The time on the clock they claimed they made the decision was after the time their body

  • 04:59

    began to execute the action.

  • 05:02

    This would imply that something else in the participant’s brain decided to flick the

  • 05:08

    wrist and the consciousness merely thinks that it made a choice, when in reality it

  • 05:13

    was just doing what the body told it to do.

  • 05:16

    The human brain is really good at using past experiences to infer new information – could

  • 05:22

    it be that every decision you think you’ve made is just coming up with excuses?

  • 05:28

    This was pioneering stuff that laid the groundwork for nearly all future studies on free will,

  • 05:35

    but of course was not without criticism.

  • 05:37

    For starters, asking the participants to remember when they decided to start the action immediately

  • 05:43

    casts doubt on the accuracy of these brain scans.

  • 05:47

    Making a mental note of the clock’s time happens after you decided to flick your wrist.

  • 05:52

    Of course it would appear like your brain began the process before you decided it.

  • 05:57

    And of course, being told to flick your wrist is a lot different to, say, deciding to commit

  • 06:03

    arson.

  • 06:04

    There’s a difference between decisions, urges, intentions, and plans.

  • 06:08

    Libet seems to assume that what he measured should be interpreted as a “decision”

  • 06:13

    rather than the more probable “urge”.

  • 06:17

    In a similar experiment, Libet attempted to solve these flaws in this experiment by adding

  • 06:21

    a new variable.

  • 06:23

    Subjects were told to push a button when they felt like it, but if they heard a buzzer [BUZZ]

  • 06:29

    during the movement, they had to stop moving.

  • 06:32

    The results were the same; the subjects’ bodies began moving to push the button before

  • 06:37

    the subject said they decided to.

  • 06:40

    BUT when they heard the buzzer and stopped the action, there was no recorded brain activity

  • 06:46

    to tell the body to stop doing the action.

  • 06:49

    It simply stopped.

  • 06:51

    Very curious.

  • 06:53

    Where did this command come from?

  • 06:56

    This could be an indication of a “veto” system, or as Libet put it: “Free won’t”.

  • 07:02

    Your body knows you are going to flick your wrist at some point, and so prepares to make

  • 07:07

    the action before you decide whether to or not.

  • 07:10

    If you decide against flicking your wrist...the brain activity subsides.

  • 07:15

    This veto comes with its own conditions, like the point of no return; If you decide against

  • 07:20

    pushing the button too late, you cannot stop it.

  • 07:23

    If you try to remember hard enough, you know you’ve done this before.

  • 07:28

    OK.

  • 07:30

    The Determinists have had their pitch.

  • 07:32

    What kind of science do the Libertarians have to support their arguments?

  • 07:37

    Uranium 238.

  • 07:38

    This goes somewhere, I promise.

  • 07:40

    Pure Uranium-238, where every particle is exactly the same, acts unpredictably.

  • 07:47

    A lump of the stuff in a pure vacuum will begin to decay and shed off alpha particles

  • 07:53

    at random.

  • 07:54

    Yes, truly random.

  • 07:57

    You can’t predict exactly how much or how quickly the Uranium will decay.

  • 08:01

    And nothing is causing it to do that.

  • 08:03

    No external force is making uranium 238 shed off particles.

  • 08:08

    This is not to say Uranium is sentient and decides how often it ejects particles, but

  • 08:13

    it does suggest that there is an element, no pun intended, of randomness and chance

  • 08:17

    in the universe.

  • 08:18

    Not just at the atomic level either; on the planetary scale, once three or more orbital

  • 08:23

    bodies begin to interact with each other, the system is no longer predictable.

  • 08:28

    No matter how many simulations you run, you cannot predict how these three colliding objects

  • 08:33

    will react.

  • 08:35

    So not everything can be determined like mentos and coke, potentially including the human

  • 08:39

    consciousness and decision making process.

  • 08:42

    But it isn’t very comforting to think that our choices are random and these decisions

  • 08:46

    are still not freely decided by you.

  • 08:49

    Some Libertarians point to the existence of an unseen, undetectable magic substance that

  • 08:55

    doesn’t exist in our dimension, which can override the laws of physics and make all

  • 08:59

    our choices free.

  • 09:01

    But in my opinion, this is a flimsy piece of evidence.

  • 09:04

    What’s more likely; Could it be that your brain is a super cool, super special quantum

  • 09:10

    science computer that contains a consciousness bending in and out of reality to a cool metaphysical

  • 09:16

    realm where it can make choice unimpeded by the real world?

  • 09:20

    I guess so, but what’s more likely?

  • 09:24

    That Or

  • 09:25

    Your brain is just a weird piece of electrical meat.

  • 09:28

    (I think it’s the second one.)

  • 09:30

    Back to experiments.

  • 09:31

    Scientists in Paris led by Aaron Schurger attempted a repeat of Libet’s experiment

  • 09:36

    from earlier but with one key difference; some of the participants would be told not

  • 09:41

    to move at all.

  • 09:43

    Schurger hypothesised that Libet had been cherry-picking data, and the slow increase

  • 09:47

    in brain activity before the conscious decision to move was just background brain noise that

  • 09:52

    they had misinterpreted as the body gearing up to move.

  • 09:55

    They used a computer to pinpoint the moment when the brain activity of the moving group

  • 10:00

    diverged from the brain activity from the non-moving group.

  • 10:03

    Lo and behold, the point where the activity was clearly not background noise coincided

  • 10:09

    with...the point of conscious decision.

  • 10:13

    To put more clearly; the point people say they decided to move was at the same time

  • 10:19

    that they actually began to move.

  • 10:21

    Later still, scientists in California found that decisions based on abstract concepts,

  • 10:27

    for example, asking participants to chose which charity to donate $1000 to, did not

  • 10:33

    produce the same results as the Libet experiments.

  • 10:36

    There was no build-up of brain activity – the decisions were simply made.

  • 10:41

    OK, sure, maybe that casts doubt on Libet’s experiments, but disproving determinism doesn’t

  • 10:47

    demonstrate indeterminable decisions.

  • 10:50

    What is the strongest possible neuroscientific evidence for the existence of free will?

  • 10:59

    Wilder Penfield was an American-Canadian neurosurgeon.

  • 11:03

    In his memoir, Mystery of the Mind, Penfield speaks of the thousands of brain operations

  • 11:09

    he undertook on conscious patients in his career.

  • 11:12

    By stimulating different parts of the exposed brain, he could make the patient do things,

  • 11:18

    like move their limbs, taste sourness, evoke memories, or make them feel a certain emotion.

  • 11:24

    Things that we know the brain is responsible for.

  • 11:27

    But in not a single one of these operations, no matter what parts of the brain he stimulated,

  • 11:33

    he could never change the patient’s free will.

  • 11:36

    He couldn’t make them think two plus two is five, change their moral beliefs, or make

  • 11:40

    them want to learn to play the violin.

  • 11:42

    Couldn’t do it.

  • 11:43

    Similarly, Penfield noted that nobody ever had seizures that changed how people think

  • 11:48

    – seizures are electrical storms in the brain that cause all sorts of devastating

  • 11:53

    physical actions, but never anything in the mind.

  • 11:58

    If all of our choices, thoughts and actions are caused entirely by brain chemistry, why

  • 12:03

    don’t people occasionally have seizures that trigger involuntary will?

  • 12:07

    Why don’t we have morality seizures?

  • 12:11

    Seizures that make you believe in Mormonism.

  • 12:13

    You might change your beliefs as a consequence of a seizure – for example, many people

  • 12:18

    become religious after near-death experiences – but not in the mountains of scientific

  • 12:23

    evidence, in the billions of seizures throughout human history, has a single instance been

  • 12:28

    recorded of a seizure directly changing a person’s conscious will.

  • 12:33

    Is this not proof that the mind is separate from our physical brain and body?

  • 12:37

    Capable of making decisions unimpeded by external stimuli?

  • 12:42

    Maybe.

  • 12:44

    Penfield didn’t make any solid conclusions from his work, though he did say it is...unlikely

  • 12:50

    that consciousness and the brain are the same thing.

  • 12:54

    But recent research casts doubt on this too: French scientists in 2009 were able to manipulate

  • 13:00

    part of the brain and give patients the strong desire to move their arms, with some patients

  • 13:06

    even feeling like they had moved their body.

  • 13:08

    “Wait, but even then, patients were able to tell what desires were stimulated by researchers

  • 13:13

    and what desires had arisen naturally.

  • 13:15

    Surely that is proof that you can’t truly manipulate willpower.”

  • 13:19

    Yes, but that could show consciousness is merely neurological background noise and just

  • 13:24

    an accidental occurrence that serves no purpose to the functioning of the body- [fast forward]

  • 13:31

    We can go back and forth about this all day, so let’s move on to the third mystery position

  • 13:35

    from earlier; Compatibilism.

  • 13:37

    Compatibilism is best described by philosopher John Locke in his Voluntary Prisoner thought

  • 13:44

    experiment; suppose there is a criminal who wants to be in prison.

  • 13:48

    He doesn’t check the door to his cell, so it could be locked or unlocked.

  • 13:52

    Is he truly a prisoner, or is he a free man?

  • 13:56

    Put more simply; “If your action is not coerced by external factors, then you have

  • 14:01

    free will, even if it is predetermined by brain activity”.

  • 14:06

    Compatibilists argue that whether you are controlled by a soul-like consciousness, or

  • 14:11

    if you are just a biological puppet, the result is the same.

  • 14:15

    You are still...You.

  • 14:17

    And unless that puppet is being controlled by something else, say you’re being brainwashed

  • 14:21

    or hypnotised or whatever, then it’s basically the same as having Libertarian free will.

  • 14:26

    It’s tough to get your head around and it’s basically a cowards way out of calling yourself

  • 14:31

    a determinist, but this model is supported by a majority of philosophers – nearly sixty

  • 14:36

    percent in fact.

  • 14:37

    Not that I put any weight on their opinions.

  • 14:40

    Neuroscientists, too, are increasingly moving towards this position, but only to avoid unproductive

  • 14:46

    arguments with philosophers.

  • 14:48

    Instead of “Free Will”, scientists are now calling it “Conscious Volition” – did

  • 14:53

    you A) Do the thing without being forced to by

  • 14:56

    external factors?

  • 14:58

    And B) are you aware you did the thing.

  • 15:01

    If yes to both, you have free will.

  • 15:05

    The final experiment I want to talk about was conducted in 1990 by researchers in Australia.

  • 15:12

    Right-handed individuals were asked to make a conscious choice to raise one of their hands

  • 15:17

    when they felt like it.

  • 15:18

    Naturally, being right handed, they were more prone to lifting their right hand, doing so

  • 15:23

    sixty percent of the time.

  • 15:25

    But, when the brain was subject to Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation without their knowledge,

  • 15:31

    this changed; they instead lifted their left hand eighty percent of the time.

  • 15:37

    Despite being toted as proof against free will, I think this is actually proof of its

  • 15:42

    existence.

  • 15:43

    Note that despite being influenced to lift their left hand more often, it was not one

  • 15:48

    hundred percent.

  • 15:49

    While you can make a decent prediction of what someone is going to do, you can never

  • 15:53

    be certain.

  • 15:55

    Think back to the philosophical views from earlier; you put a spoon under a microwave

  • 15:59

    and it blows up one hundred percent of the time.

  • 16:02

    You put a human brain under a microwave and it doesn’t always react the same.

  • 16:07

    A rock sliding down a mountain, or a domino tipping over has no say in the matter and

  • 16:12

    cannot stop it, but a human being can deliberate on their choices, they can pause to think

  • 16:18

    before acting, and they can weigh the pros and cons of each decision.

  • 16:22

    Maybe the human body is like a ship; the crew, or your conscious thoughts, can steer the

  • 16:28

    ship the best they can using all the sensory inputs they have.

  • 16:32

    But the condition of the ship and the sway of the ocean also affects the captain’s

  • 16:37

    decision and how easy it is to navigate the waters.

  • 16:41

    Still, as we’ve discussed, the seeds of doubt are still everywhere for both sides

  • 16:46

    of the argument and no matter how compelling you might find one piece of evidence, evidence

  • 16:51

    to the contrary is still there.

  • 16:54

    This sort of thing used to keep me up at night and I was terrified of the possibility that

  • 16:58

    my entire life is just watching something else pilot my body and I’m just along for

  • 17:03

    the ride.

  • 17:04

    I think we’d all like to believe that the people we love, our life goals, or even what

  • 17:09

    we had for breakfast this morning wasn’t decided for us at the start of the universe.

  • 17:15

    But then I read about philosopher William James.

  • 17:19

    He was extremely depressed for months on end, because he wasn’t sure free will existed.

  • 17:24

    Until one day, on the 30th of April 1870, he instantly cured this depression, by writing

  • 17:30

    in his diary “I will assume for the present that it is no illusion.

  • 17:35

    My first act of free will shall be to believe in free will”.

  • 17:40

    And as always, thanks for watching.

All

The example sentences of DETERMINIST in videos (1 in total of 1)

a determiner determinist noun, singular or mass , but coordinating conjunction this determiner model noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present supported verb, past participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner majority noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction philosophers noun, plural proper noun, singular nearly adverb sixty noun, singular or mass

Use "determinist" in a sentence | "determinist" example sentences

How to use "determinist" in a sentence?

  • A man may be a pessimistic determinist before lunch and an optimistic believer in the will's freedom after it.
    -Aldous Huxley-
  • Im not a techno-determinist. I believe we need to improve our existing human resources, and technology can only be a complement.
    -Shashi Tharoor-
  • David Brin is a technological determinist. He thinks that we understand the trend and we need to hop on it. I don't have any such illusions.
    -Bruce Sterling-

Definition and meaning of DETERMINIST

What does "determinist mean?"

noun
Person believing that fate decides everything.