• EelBolshevikism [none/use name]
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      edit-2
      2 months ago

      What(?? I don't even know this lady, wtf is super determinism too. Does she think that there's a god deciding our decisions? Because I don't think you can get more deterministic than our thoughts being defined by our experiences, unless you just start making stuff up or genuinely believe in the supernatural

      • AlpineSteakHouse [any]
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        2 months ago

        wtf is super determinism too

        It just means that every minute decision you make was predetermined by various material factors. I.E. the reason you make the decision you do is because your brain was in a state which was determined by various material factors. Those material factors were predetermined by other material factors so on and so forth. It's mostly used as a way to get around seemingly faster-than-light information sharing in quantum physics.

        If you run a physics simulation with the exact same parameters then it should have the exact same results right? Super Determinism postulates that the universe operates in a similar way. That if you could simulate the entire universe and it started out exactly the same, then the simulated universe and the current universe would be identical.

        • robinnn
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          2 months ago

          No no this is plain WRONG :( These “super determinists” need to read Gramsci and understand that the subject IS NOT a slave!!

          • AlpineSteakHouse [any]
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            2 months ago

            No offense, but there's a big difference between economic determinism and physical determinism. Gramsci was writing about humans in a sociological context, not sub atomic particles and quantum mechanics. They do not contradict the other. Unless you mean to imply that particles behave like human beings for some reason.

            • robinnn
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              1 month ago

              From the comment I responded to:

              It just means that every minute decision you make was predetermined by various material factors. I.E. the reason you make the decision you do is because your brain was in a state which was determined by various material factors. Those material factors were predetermined by other material factors so on and so forth.

        • Tomorrow_Farewell [any, they/them]
          ·
          2 months ago

          Not really sure why people think so poorly of physical determinism. Why do people think that if the universe were to be put into the same state twice then we would get two different 'histories' of its states from that point on?

        • EelBolshevikism [none/use name]
          ·
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          This is just incorrect, read theory

          https://www.essentiafoundation.org/the-fantasy-behind-sabine-hossenfelders-superdeterminism/reading/

          that's not what I read at all. Physical "determinism" is something I actually believe in and it's entirely different from the idea that the universe itself "knows" what's going to happen. Regular physical determinism can't explain faster than light information sharing in quantum physics- Regular physical determinism would assume that the "normal" physical laws interacting is what would predetermine anything, which can't explain faster than light interaction without some extra part. Superdeterminism seeks to be the belief that either the universe intrinsically "decides" everything that will happen before it does, or has some sort of weird invisible law dictating it, separate and superceding from the laws of physics that we know, including quantum physics. Hence the "super". All you described was normal determinism (which is still fucked over by quantum physics even if superdeterminism is real because it just doesn't make sense for anyone to be able to physically understand how superdeterminism works. What would happen if we did? We would act on information about what we find out happens but we would be super-determined by the universe to do that but we would be able to see that because we figured it out so we would act on the fact that the universe decided we would act on it but that would be decided by the universe too so we would see that because... which is different from normal physical determinism because each realization is arguably explainable by physical processes and isn't pre-determined, just inevitable due to physics.)

          Some Redditor:

          Superdeterminism is dismissed because it is not a "useful" theory. It can't be falsified, but in a superdeterministic universe falsification itself would not be real. The fundamental process of science would not be "real" in any meaningful way. In a superdeterministic universe, the outcomes of experiments no longer reveal anything about any underlying laws - because those outcomes can be scripted. Statistics as a science ceases to work, since statistics is heavily reliant on concepts of probability and independent variables.

          In other words super determinism seems to be the belief that the laws of physics themselves are an illusion, and rather than things being the result of other things, we simply perceive them as such because some sort of hidden, probably unknowable internal mechanism predetermined both in advance. So you don't test something and get a result because the laws of physics would determine it, you test something which was predetermined by the universe and get a result which was predetermined by the universe but neither are intrinsically related in any way other than the fact that they have illusion they are due to the spacing in time.

          Some Redditor:

          In superdeterminism the entire[ty of a] home run event is preencoded in the ball and again in the guy. There is a variable in the ball that says “at time x, you will change direction and fly over the fence”. There is a variable in the guy that says “at time x, you will swing the bat at this angle”. Momentum and velocity are not why the ball flies. This is a well crafted illusion by the universe in superdeterminism. The ball flies for unknowable reasons that strangely approximate the appearance of our laws of physics.