Adsolution wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 7:10 amEveryone's influenced by their environment of course. It's a part of the equation, it would be wrong to remove it. If you're referring to making decisions based on information you don't have/things outside your experience, that doesn't really make sense, right?
Moral culpability is just a concept confined to our human thought process (which may or may not be determined entirely by physics, which I think is a completely unrelated topic), so I'm not sure how it pervades all layers of reality. Maybe I'm misunderstanding the question though?
For one thing, I think people's thought processes are completely determined by physics, and I do believe it is relevant to the issue. If your brain isn't completely determined by physics, what else is it determined by? Magic?
Of course we don't understand how consciousness works or why it emerges from such simple building blocks as neurons, or what else it might emerge from. But we do know how those building blocks work. We know exactly what a brain is made of from its chemical constituents up to the physical properties of neurons and how they behave. And seeing as all of the higher level structures in a brain are made of these neurons, then where would this, as I would call "magical" ability to think come from? I suppose it must come from some particular arrangement of neurons. My opinion is that perhaps it's something like a phase transition - how water can suddenly become steam at a very precise temperature, and how water and steam have such different properties despite being made of the exact same thing. Perhaps consciousness emerges from some precise density of neurons, where a small number of neurons is no more conscious than a rock, but at some point of complexity, consciousness just bubbles into existence. But that really is going off on a tangent...
Anyway, I think every decision a person makes can be boiled down essentially to two things, access to information and the inherent structure of their brain. Two people may have very similar brains but with different information, they may end up with completely different morals. I'd like to think that if I was born into an aristocratic family in nazi Germany that I wouldn't become a nazi, but that's really unrealistic. Even with the exact brain I had at birth, morals are gained from life and the information you are exposed to, so it's highly likely that I would have been raised a nazi, and would have thought like a nazi. The same goes for anyone. I think from a fundamental physical point of view, what comes out is just a product of what goes in, information wise. So if I have to admit that my brain would have made a good nazi in the right conditions, it makes it difficult for me to condemn other people for their crimes, when they are completely a result of nurture and nature, neither of which you can control.
To be clear I'm not saying I would let a nazi off the hook. But I believe justice for the sake of justice, as in causing punishment and pain to someone just for the sake of getting back at them, is pointless and wrong. I think if a criminal is punished, most of the time they're just thinking "fuck you I hate this I want to get out of here". Punishment has other purposes of course, such as setting an example to deter other people from committing crimes, but in terms of pure justice, I think the only punishment I can really agree with is rehabilitation. To be able to change someone's mind so that they truly regret what they have done, and now have to live in their own internal punishment of regret. But if course you can't just get anyone to regret their actions, sometimes it is impossible, or at least impractical to the point of impossible.
I think my point of view is pretty uncommon as most of the friends I have talked to about this believe they have an inherent sense of justice, that if a criminal put their family to harm, they would want to see the same mystery inflicted on that criminal. But I don't share that view, and I think my beliefs on free will have let up to me having that view.
Again I think I've gone off topic a little. But it's in the same vein and I think it's interesting so wotevaa