Originally posted by: PrinceofWands
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: PrinceofWands
Seriously though, let's play a game. I'm deciding what to do tonight. People expect me to drink, but I don't like to do what people expect, which people also know. Given that, what do people expect me to do tonight? Since both (and neither) choice is correct for me (and because I really don't care at the moment), I draw a card from a deck: red card I will drink, black card I won't. It comes out red.
So we're drinking and you ask me if I want to do 5 shots in a row. I don't really care since it won't affect me much, but I'm in a non-choosing mood (which I frequently am). So I tell you to flip a coin: heads I'll drink, tails I won't.
Now then, thru all those steps and twists of luck my only choices were ones of apathy, yet they instigated actions of randomness. In that way rather or I drink 5 shots or not is still a choice. What is certainly missing, however, is any ability to 'know' my choice, or for it to be decided by anything other than blind luck - once my choices were made.
The choice to do drugs is similar. It is not pre-determined. Neither God, nor the universe set the moment in the book of ages. Yet neither is it totally random, since the individual had the ability to remove choice from the hands of chance.
The matter of predetermination has nothing to do with a lack of choice. You scenario hit it on the head, in cases of apathy indifference, lack on unconscious motivation, one can exercise choice. In such cases we are speaking about something irrelevant to the discussion, whether drug addicts are addicts by choice. For example, why is it there are so many more people making the choice to ruin their lives on drugs in ghettos of our world. It is an accident that so many more people make that choice there. We are not talking about some theoretical mind game you invent to state the obvious. We are talking about drug legalization and related issues and how this absurd idea that people are somehow all equal in whether they choose to take them. I said that people retreat behind the notion of choice for one reason, to escape the realization of their own personal responsibility. In your words, you chose not to care what happens to other people on the pretext they did it to themselves when you had a hand in their decision. So if you prefer, they chose to take drugs to escape the sh!t you chose to dumped on them. Stop and they will too. It's your choice. Now let's see, what is he going to choose?
I disagree. What I did was point out that even things which seem beyond our control are really subsequent to choices we had already made. I also showed that our choices negate the ability of others to understand our actions.
Are people in poor urban areas more likely to use drugs? Probably. Why? Many reasons - availability, economic factors, different sub-cultures, etc. Can you actually pinpoint it? Probably not. Hell, I could make a VERY strong case that drug use is the result of communities growing beyond the extended family unit without singular artificial homogeneity (such as that provided by a religious institution). Is that always true? No. Might just as easily be a disconnect from our natural environment. *shrug*
Point is that all of those factors can contribute and be true some of the time as influencers, but the absolute choice remains in the hands of the individual. If that were not true then everyone would be doing drugs who shares common environmental factors - but they don't. Why can we look at single family with all siblings of one gender, close in age, and find that only one of them turns to drugs? Is that one genetically inferior? Unlikely. The answer is that choices were made by that individual which put them in the position to choose to do drugs. What about the rural individual who does drugs? I thought it was a ghetto problem? The answer is again, they made a choice. Choice, choice, choice. It's always individual choice.
I've had some crappy times in my life, but I made the conscious choice not to take drugs other than alcohol (and this is knowing a lot about drugs to dissolve misinformation and societal stigmas). Almost everyone I know turned to drugs, yet experienced less hardships previous to the decision. Some had no hardships at all. A couple people I've met have had far worse lives than me. Some did drugs, some didn't. The ONLY constant factor among all of us is that we were all individuals who were endowed with the ability to make choices. The reasons for the choices we made is moot - the key is choice itself.
Edit: I also want to say that if you want this to leave philosophy and get back to the topic we have to address the point and scope of government. Because I believe in the absoluteness of the individual I do not accept a government that tries to takes choice from me. Given that basis I cannot accept a government which makes drugs illegal. If you want to argue that, argue the basis of government, not the basis of drug use. Because legal or illegal, I won't do drugs.