CZ:Featured article/Current
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Standard argument against free will
The standard argument against free will is an argument that there exists a conflict between the possibility of free will and the postulates of determinism and indeterminism. A number of authors use this terminology.[1][2]
A formal statement of the 'standard argument' can be phrased as follows:[3][4]
- 1. The concept of determinism contradicts that of free will.
- 2. The concept of indeterminism also contradicts free will.
- 3. Some occurrences are governed by determinism, and all the rest by indeterminism.
all of which lead to the conclusion:
- 4. Free will does not govern any occurrences (does not exist).
The first two premises sometimes are referred to as the "deterministic" and "indeterministic" horns of the dilemma of determinism,[5] the conflict between the intuition of personal autonomy and the intuition that the world proceeds in a manner independent of human concerns.
notes |
---|
|