To rephrase: do you believe that all choices made by humans are completely under the humans’ conscious control ? If not, what proportion of our choices is under our control, and what proportion is written into our genes and is thus difficult, if not impossible, to change (given our present level of technology) ?
The whole language is wrong here.
What does it mean to talk about a choice being “completely under the humans’ conscious control”? Obviously, the causal connections wind through and through all manner of things that are outside consciousness as well as inside. When could you ever say that a decision is “completely under conscious control”?
Then you talk as if a decision not “completely under conscious control” must be “written into the genes”. Where does that come from?
do you read any fiction books?
Why do you specify fiction? Is fiction “passive entertainment” but non-fiction something else?
There may be something hardcoded in our genes (maybe not yours personally, but on average) that makes us enjoy art and music.
What is this “us” that is separate from and acted upon by our genes? Mentalistic dualism?
My only solution is “don’t do that then”.
Don’t do what ? Do you have a moral theory which works better than utilitarianism/consequentialism ?
Don’t crash and burn. I have no moral theory and am not impressed by anything on offer from the philosophers.
To sum up, there’s a large and complex set of assumptions behind everything you’re saying here that I don’t think I share, but I can only guess at from glimpsing the shadowy outlines. I doubt further discussion will get anywhere useful.
The whole language is wrong here.
What does it mean to talk about a choice being “completely under the humans’ conscious control”? Obviously, the causal connections wind through and through all manner of things that are outside consciousness as well as inside. When could you ever say that a decision is “completely under conscious control”?
Then you talk as if a decision not “completely under conscious control” must be “written into the genes”. Where does that come from?
Why do you specify fiction? Is fiction “passive entertainment” but non-fiction something else?
What is this “us” that is separate from and acted upon by our genes? Mentalistic dualism?
Don’t crash and burn. I have no moral theory and am not impressed by anything on offer from the philosophers.
To sum up, there’s a large and complex set of assumptions behind everything you’re saying here that I don’t think I share, but I can only guess at from glimpsing the shadowy outlines. I doubt further discussion will get anywhere useful.