I disagree. Determinism doesn’t make the concepts of “control” or “causation” meaningless. It makes sense to say that, to a certain degree, you often can control your own attention, while in other circumstances you can’t: if there’s a really loud sound near you, you are somewhat forced to pay attention to it.
From there you can derive a concept of responsibility, which is used e.g. in law. I know that the book Actual Causality focuses on these ideas (but there might be other books on the same topics that are easier to read or simply better in their exposition).
That only works if you reject determinism. If the initial conditions of the universe resulted in your decision by necessity, then it’s not your decision, is it?
I disagree. Determinism doesn’t make the concepts of “control” or “causation” meaningless. It makes sense to say that, to a certain degree, you often can control your own attention, while in other circumstances you can’t: if there’s a really loud sound near you, you are somewhat forced to pay attention to it.
From there you can derive a concept of responsibility, which is used e.g. in law. I know that the book Actual Causality focuses on these ideas (but there might be other books on the same topics that are easier to read or simply better in their exposition).
That only works if you reject determinism. If the initial conditions of the universe resulted in your decision by necessity, then it’s not your decision, is it?