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NotesPhilosophyTopic 6.2Causality and determinism
Back to Philosophy Topics
6.2.33 min read

Causality and determinism

IB Philosophy • Unit 6

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Contents

  • Every event has a cause
  • Determinism — one possible future
  • But what IS a physical law?
The big idea: Science works by finding causes: push this, that moves; heat this, it melts.

Now turn the same lens on yourself. Your brain is physical. So is every choice you make just the next link in a long chain of causes — with no real 'you' pulling the strings?

This micro pulls the whole topic together. We've asked whether the self can be reduced to chemistry (6.2.1) and what kind of self there even is (6.2.2). Now the deepest worry: if the self runs on causality, does that leave any room for you?

Hold onto this: Two ideas will do all the work here: causality (every event is brought about by an earlier one) and, built on top of it, determinism (given the past plus the laws, only one future is possible). Keep them straight — the second is the bigger claim.

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Follow the causal chain all the way out and you reach a startling picture.

Determinism: the future is already fixed: Determinism says: every event is completely fixed by what came before plus the laws of physics. Your brain is part of nature, so your next thought and next choice are just as fixed as a falling rock's path. A super-scientist who knew every atom and every law could, in principle, predict exactly what you'll do tomorrow — because there's only one way it can go. On this picture the self isn't a free author; it's a link in a causal chain that stretches back before you were born.
Checkpoint — determinism: In one line: if the self runs on cause and effect, then given the past plus the laws only one future is possible — and 'you' are a link in that chain. Hold that — the next section asks whether physical laws really force this.

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The whole worry rests on one word — 'law' — so it's worth asking what a physical law actually is.

Iron rules, or just patterns?: Picture two ways to read a law of nature. On the iron-rule reading, a law is a force that makes things happen — it grips the world and leaves it no choice, so the future really is locked. On the pattern reading (closer to David Hume), a law is just a very reliable habit of nature — 'this has always followed that' — a description of what happens, not a command forcing it. If laws are only patterns, they describe the future without fixing it — and the case for hard determinism loosens. Two more escape routes sit alongside: modern physics suggests some events are only probable, not fixed; and compatibilism says a choice can be both caused and free, as long as it flows from you and isn't forced from outside.
Go further — higher-level insight: The sharpest move is to notice what work the word 'law' is doing. Hard determinism needs laws to be iron rules that force the future. But if laws are only reliable patterns (Hume), they never force anything — they just describe. So the strongest reply to 'you're trapped in the causal chain' isn't to deny cause and effect; it's to question whether the chain is as rigid as the picture assumes. Naming that is a top-band point.
Checkpoint — the laws: In one line: whether the self is trapped depends on what laws ARE — iron rules that force the future lock it, but mere patterns only describe it. This is the door back to Freedom.

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Fill the gap: hard determinism needs laws of nature to be iron rules that ______ the future; if laws only describe it, the case loosens. [1 mark]

Related Philosophy Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

6.1.1What makes something science?
6.1.2Falsification
6.1.3Paradigms and revolutions
6.1.4Induction and the scientific method
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