
Our Fate Is A Collection Of John Martin Fischer's Previously Published Articles On The Relationship Between God's Foreknowledge And Human Freedom. The Book Contains A New Introductory Essay That Places All Of The Chapters In The Book Into A Cohesive Framework. The Introductory Essay Also Provides Some New Views About The Issues Treated In The Book, Including A Bold And Original Account Of God's Foreknowledge Of Free Actions In A Causally Indeterministic World. The Focus Of The Book Is A Powerful Traditional Argument For The Incompatibility Of God's Foreknowledge And Human Freedom To Do Otherwise. Fischer Presents This Argument (in Various Forms) And Defends It Against Some Of The Most Salient Criticisms, Especially Ockhamism. The Incompatibilist's Argument Is Driven By The Fixity Of The Past, And, In Particular, The Fixity Of God's Prior Beliefs About Our Current Behavior. The Author Gives Special Attention To Ockhamism, Which Contends That God's Prior Beliefs Are Not Over-and-done-with In The Past, And Are Thus Not Subject To The Intuitive Idea Of The Fixity Of The Past. In The End, Fischer Defends The Argument For The Incompatibility Of God's Foreknowledge And Human Freedom To Do Otherwise, But He Further Argues That This Incompatibility Need Not Entail The Incompatibility Of God's Foreknowledge And Human Moral Responsibility. Thus, Through This Collection Of Essays, Fischer Develops A Semicompatibilist View--the Belief That God's Foreknowledge Is Entirely Compatible With Human Moral Responsibility, Even If God's Foreknowledge Rules Out Freedom To Do Otherwise.
This collection investigates the logical compatibility between divine foreknowledge and human moral responsibility. John Martin Fischer, a prominent philosopher in the field of free will and moral responsibility, compiles his previously published articles to construct a unified framework. He argues that while divine foreknowledge may preclude the ability to act otherwise, it does not necessarily negate human moral accountability, a position he terms semicompatibilism. The text provides a rigorous defense of this view against traditional incompatibilist challenges, specifically addressing the Ockhamist perspective on the fixity of the past.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this collection as a significant contribution to the ongoing debate regarding divine omniscience and human agency. Readers frequently note the technical density of the prose, which is best suited for those with a background in analytic philosophy or theology.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199311307
ISBN-13:
9780199311309
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