According to studies, belief in determinism can cause both immoral behavior and general unhappiness. Is it then better to believe in free will even if it is a lie?
Or is Sam Harris right? Is it better to accept the "truth" (according to scientific understanding) of determinism.
When people hear there is no free will, they wrongly become fatalistic; they think their efforts will make no difference. But this is a mistake. People are not moving toward an inevitable destiny; given a different stimulus (like a different idea about free will), they will behave differently and so have different lives. If people better understood these fine distinctions, Harris believes, the consequences of losing faith in free will would be much less negative than Vohs’s and Baumeister’s experiments suggest.
There’s No Such Thing as Free Will
Belief can change our lives? But, are we free to choose what we believe?
Seems to me it's hard to escape a need for indeterminism, at least the belief in it, for the sake of civilization.
Or is Sam Harris right? Is it better to accept the "truth" (according to scientific understanding) of determinism.
When people hear there is no free will, they wrongly become fatalistic; they think their efforts will make no difference. But this is a mistake. People are not moving toward an inevitable destiny; given a different stimulus (like a different idea about free will), they will behave differently and so have different lives. If people better understood these fine distinctions, Harris believes, the consequences of losing faith in free will would be much less negative than Vohs’s and Baumeister’s experiments suggest.
There’s No Such Thing as Free Will
Belief can change our lives? But, are we free to choose what we believe?
Seems to me it's hard to escape a need for indeterminism, at least the belief in it, for the sake of civilization.