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1.66 MB

Extraction Summary

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Quotes

Document Information

Type: Essay / manuscript page (likely an attachment or evidence exhibit)
File Size: 1.66 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a philosophical essay or manuscript discussing the concepts of free will, determinism, and their relationship to the justice system. It references the 2011 London riots as a case study for moral choices and critiques the philosophical concept of 'compatibilism.' While the content is philosophical, the footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016005' indicates it was included as evidence in a House Oversight Committee investigation, possibly related to materials seized or produced during an inquiry (often associated with Epstein or Ghislaine Maxwell due to their interests in science/philosophy, though neither is named in this specific text).

Organizations (1)

Name Type Context
House Oversight Committee
Identified via footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016005'

Timeline (1 events)

Summer 2011
Riots and looting incidents
London
Unnamed children/rioters

Locations (1)

Location Context
Referenced regarding riots in the summer of 2011

Key Quotes (4)

"Did they make these decisions freely or was their behavior inevitable, dictated at the dawn of time?"
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Quote #1
"Free will is at the heart of our justice system."
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Quote #2
"“The Universe made me do it!”"
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Quote #3
"I believe true free will is a physical principle with observable effects on the Universe that would not be seen in a determined one."
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Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,621 characters)

A child grows up in poverty, their father absent, mother a drug addict. Riots break out and the child defends the local convenience store. Another child born on the same road, but from a better background, loots the store and is arrested. This scene played out on the streets of London during the summer of 2011, but similar incidents happen all across the world. People choose different moral paths; one person makes a good decision; the other, a bad one. Did they make these decisions freely or was their behavior inevitable, dictated at the dawn of time?
Free will is at the heart of our justice system. It requires a crime to be intentionally committed by a person of sound mind. If I kill you in an accident or because I am mentally incapacitated, I am innocent. Of course, if I mentally incapacitate myself with alcohol I would be guilty of manslaughter, perhaps even murder.
Our justice system requires a crime to be intentionally committed by a person of sound mind. Whenever we see something bad in the world we trace the events back to the thought processes which led up to it. It seems we punish the decisions in our brains leading to a crime, not the crime itself. But, in a deterministic Universe my thoughts could never be at fault. They are inevitable. “The Universe made me do it!”
You need not worry about the fabric of society falling apart in a deterministic Universe. The whole of existence will play out according to a predetermined script, complete with lawyers, trials, drama and pathos. The judge, jury and executioner would also have no free will. It would look as if you paid the price for the choices you made, but this would be an illusion. The whole thing would be like one enormous screenplay.
The concept of determinism goes against our conscious experience. We all have a strong sense of free will. I certainly think I have it! And this presents a problem, because the classical laws of physics say our Universe is entirely deterministic, and that free will is an illusion.
I should briefly mention ‘compatibilism’, a branch of philosophy that claims determinism is not at odds with free will. It argues that if I feel free and my actions do not appear constrained, then I am free even though my future might be inevitable: a sensation of freedom is sufficient. This seems rather feeble. I am seeking an explanation for how we might be truly free to choose our actions, not some linguistic trick to argue freedom is subjective. I believe true free will is a physical principle with observable effects on the Universe that would not be seen in a determined one.
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