Here is your "question" PB.
President Bush said:
I wondered: If RandFan were deterministically required to ask the question why we would ever think that humans are "doing" anything more than causality required of them... how could it be a meaningful question?
Now, from this question tell us what your premises are and what conclusion logically follows from those premises? Sometimes the best way to spot the fallacy of an argument is to try and diagram the argument. If you don't even know what the premises are or if you can't identify them then you don't even know if you are in fact making an argument. So Just list them one at a time and then tell us what the conclusion is.
P1
P2
P3
Conclusion.
I'll give it a shot, though I've never been "required" before to write such an argument, RandFan.
1. Causal determinism is the idea that every event is necessitated by prior events and the laws of nature.
2. If causal determinism is true, RandFan asking the question "Why would we ever think that humans are 'doing' anything more than causality required of them" was completely fixed by prior events and the laws of nature.
3. It is not up to RandFan what the laws of nature are or what happened in the past.
4. Therefore, RandFan asking the question "Why would we ever think that humans are 'doing' anything more than causality required of them" was completely fixed by circumstances that are not up to him.
5. If an action of RandFan's is not up to him, he is not free.
6. Therefore, his question "Why would we ever think that humans are 'doing' anything more than causality required of them" was not freely asked.
7. "Why would we ever think that humans are 'doing' anything more than causality required of them" is a question of free will.
8. If a question of free will were not freely asked, it would contradict the basis of that question.
9. A question without basis is meaningless.
10. Therefore, if RandFan were causally determined to ask the question "Why would we ever think that humans are 'doing' anything more than causality required of them" it would constitute a meaningless question.