Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Determinism and indeterminism

View through CrossRef
Over the centuries, the doctrine of determinism has been understood, and assessed, in different ways. Since the seventeenth century, it has been commonly understood as the doctrine that every event has a cause; or as the predictability, in principle, of the entire future. To assess the truth of determinism, so understood, philosophers have often looked to physical science; they have assumed that their current best physical theory is their best guide to the truth of determinism. It seems that most have believed that classical physics, especially Newton’s physics, is deterministic. And in this century, most have believed that quantum theory is indeterministic. Since quantum theory has superseded classical physics, philosophers have typically come to the tentative conclusion that determinism is false. In fact, these impressions are badly misleading. The above formulations of determinism are unsatisfactory. Once we use a better formulation, we see that there is a large gap between the determinism of a given physical theory, and the bolder, vague idea that motivated the traditional formulations: the idea that the world in itself is deterministic. Admittedly, one can make sense of this idea by adopting a sufficiently bold metaphysics; but it cannot be made sense of just by considering determinism for physical theories. As regards physical theories, the traditional impression is again misleading. Which theories are deterministic turns out to be a subtle and complicated matter, with many open questions. But broadly speaking, it turns out that much of classical physics, even much of Newton’s physics, is indeterministic. Furthermore, the alleged indeterminism of quantum theory is very controversial: it enters, if at all, only in quantum theory’s account of measurement processes, an account which remains the most controversial part of the theory.
Title: Determinism and indeterminism
Description:
Over the centuries, the doctrine of determinism has been understood, and assessed, in different ways.
Since the seventeenth century, it has been commonly understood as the doctrine that every event has a cause; or as the predictability, in principle, of the entire future.
To assess the truth of determinism, so understood, philosophers have often looked to physical science; they have assumed that their current best physical theory is their best guide to the truth of determinism.
It seems that most have believed that classical physics, especially Newton’s physics, is deterministic.
And in this century, most have believed that quantum theory is indeterministic.
Since quantum theory has superseded classical physics, philosophers have typically come to the tentative conclusion that determinism is false.
In fact, these impressions are badly misleading.
The above formulations of determinism are unsatisfactory.
Once we use a better formulation, we see that there is a large gap between the determinism of a given physical theory, and the bolder, vague idea that motivated the traditional formulations: the idea that the world in itself is deterministic.
Admittedly, one can make sense of this idea by adopting a sufficiently bold metaphysics; but it cannot be made sense of just by considering determinism for physical theories.
As regards physical theories, the traditional impression is again misleading.
Which theories are deterministic turns out to be a subtle and complicated matter, with many open questions.
But broadly speaking, it turns out that much of classical physics, even much of Newton’s physics, is indeterministic.
Furthermore, the alleged indeterminism of quantum theory is very controversial: it enters, if at all, only in quantum theory’s account of measurement processes, an account which remains the most controversial part of the theory.

Related Results

Determinism and indeterminism
Determinism and indeterminism
Over the centuries, the doctrine of determinism has been understood, and assessed, in different ways. Since the seventeenth century, it has been commonly understood as the doctrine...
Economic Determinism
Economic Determinism
The concept of economic determinism refers to monocausal determinism by material, economic factors. The idea is often associated with Karl Marx's “historical materialism,” but it i...
Freedom and Determinism
Freedom and Determinism
'Freedom and Determinism' is a conflicting postulate with reference to the nature of human conduct. Is man free or is everything determined? Freedom is a matter of choice based on ...
Determinacy, Indeterminacy, and the Romantic in William Gibson
Determinacy, Indeterminacy, and the Romantic in William Gibson
Postmodernisms reject both realism/antirealism and determinism/indeterminism as western ontological binaries. In this context, William Gibson can be read for residual modes of thin...
Branching Space-Times
Branching Space-Times
Abstract This book develops a rigorous theory of indeterminism as a local and modal concept. Its crucial insight is that our world contains events or processes with ...
How the Self-Defeating Argument Against Determinism Defeats Itself
How the Self-Defeating Argument Against Determinism Defeats Itself
There is a well-known argument which is an attempt to show that all arguments in favour of determinism are self-defeating. Proponents of the Determinism-Is-Self-Defeating Argument ...
Free will and believing in determinism [English original]
Free will and believing in determinism [English original]
The article addresses the issue of free will and determinism through a discussion of Newcomb’s paradox, presented as a dialogue between the spirits of Lady Luck and Fate. I argue t...
Epistemic and Technological Determinism in Development Aid
Epistemic and Technological Determinism in Development Aid
Since the turn of the millennium, the major development agencies have been promoting “knowledge for development,” “ICT for development,” or the “knowledge economy” as new paradigms...

Back to Top