Freedom and Determinism

“Freedom and determinism” was one of the first “big thoughts” that I encountered in college and I have wrestled with the notion ever since.  One image that helped me along the way came from psychologist Rollo May, I think, when he likened freedom without limits to being like a river without banks; for, a river without banks would be useless and also possibly destructive.  One of the best ways of summing up my clinical practice was that I frequently assisting clients who had too much freedom in their hearts and were “acting out.”  The clinical term was, “impulse control disorders.”

I want to share some of the thoughts of May, gleaned from his book, “Psychology and the Human Dilemma”:

The inseparable relation of self and world also implies responsibility.  The term means “responding,” “response to.”  I cannot, in other words, become a self except as I am engaged continuously in responding to the world of which I am a part.

What is interesting here is that the patient moves toward freedom and responsibility in his living as he becomes more conscious of the deterministic experiences in his life. That is, as explores how he was rejected or over protected or how he was hated as a child, how his repressed bodily needs drive him, how his personal history as a member of a minority group, let us say, conditions his development, and even as he becomes conscious of his of being a member of Western culture at a particular traumatic moment in the historical evolution of that society, he finds his margin of freedom likewise enlarged.  As he becomes more conscious of the infinite deterministic forces in his life, he becomes more free.

Freedom is, thus, not the opposite to determinism.  Freedom is the capacity to know that he is the determined one, to pause between stimulus and response and thus to throw his weight, however slight it might be on the side of one particular response among several other possible ones.

We are prone to see ourselves as “above” history and to fail to see that our psychology, and even modern science itself, are historical products like any other aspect of culture.

May’s book brings to my mind the word contingency, making me aware of just our contingent our very existence is.  We cannot truthfully declare, as did one poet, “I am the captain of my fate, the master of my soul.” But we do have that power presented above as “awareness” of our contingent, finite, and mysterious world…and of the “contingent, finite, and mysterious” nature of our very own personal existence.

2 thoughts on “Freedom and Determinism

  1. Monte Zerger's avatarMonte Zerger

    Great post! I always like when you integrate something from your life into a post. As I think you’ve already surmised, I am very interested in a person’s interior. I too have wrestled for years with freedom and determinism. One of those answerable questions I nevertheless have asked over the years is this: Did I have any freedom to choose what conditions I was born into – when, where, and to whom? Obviously those conditions played a huge part in shaping me. Who would I be if those were quite different? How much did the following shape me: being dropped down to pacifistic Mennonite parents (strong mother – weak, though devoted father) living on a wheat farm in Kansas just a month before Pearl Harbor, etc.? I could add I was my parent’s firstborn, firstborn grandchild of my paternal grandparents and firstborn grandson of my maternal grandparent. This was in a very paternal culture, so did I grow up feeling “special” in some way. I have been accused of that. I could go on and on about this, but it’s a bit pointless because we really can never know.

    Turning to reality, I woke up Saturday night to a cold, cold house. I felt the baseboards and they were cold. I went out to the old garage where the boiler system is. There was water dropping from it, and clearly something was wacko. Eventually I called a plumber who advertises 24/7 service. He agreed to come out after Mass (good Hispanic Catholic), and came out around 10:00. He quickly new what the problem was and fixed it. I expected to pay double time for his labor since it was Sunday. Still the bill shocked me: $569.10. Nevertheless, I didn’t see how I could wait until Monday to have him come out. After it was fixed, it seemed to take forever for the house to warm up. Baseboard heat is my favorite from of heat, but after it’s shut down, it takes a long time for it to recover. This was so different from forced air. Finally by the time I went to bed last night the house was toasty.

    I’ll see you tomorrow at 9:45, barring a meteor strike that takes out Taos, or maybe the planet.

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