Phil 101: The Consequence Argument for Incompatibilism

There is an important argument that many find makes a compelling case for Incompatibilism.

Some texts call this the Consequence Argument; others call it the Before You Were Born Argument.

The argument goes as follows:

If Determinism is true, then how we act today and in the future is the necessary consequence of the laws of nature and the way the world was before we were born. But it is not up to us what went on before we were born. And neither is it up to us what the laws of nature are. We have no control over those things. And if it’s not up to us whether certain things happen, then neither is it up to us whether the consequences of those things happen. If we have no control over the laws and the past, and they have the inevitable physical consequence that we will act a certain way, then we have no control over how we act. Hence, if Determinism is true, then it is not up to us how we act today or in the future.

This is called “the Consequence Argument,” because it appeals to the principle “If we have no control over certain things, then we don’t have control over the consequences of those things, either.”

Lemos presents the Consequence Argument on pp. 24–5.

van Inwagen presents the argument starting on the bottom of p. 273 and ending 2/3 of the way down p. 276. The claim I’ve highlighted in purple correspends to what he calls “the Principle.”

Where I've said that something is "not up to us," van Inwagen says that it's "untouchable," meaning that you are and always were unable to do anything to alter it (and couldn't have done anything even if you knew more or were more lucky).

The Consequence Argument makes a very strong case for the conclusion that Determinism will be incompatible with free will. There are things a Compatibilist can say in response, but those things are rather subtle and may not be convincing.