
Common sense tells us that we are morally responsible for our actions only if we have free will -- and that we have free will only if we are able to choose among alternative actions. Common sense tells us that we do have free will and are morally responsible for many of the things we do. Common sense also tells us that we are objects in the natural world, governed by its laws. Nevertheless, many contemporary philosophers deny that we have free will or that free will is a necessary prerequisite for moral responsibility. Some hold that we are morally responsible only if we are somehow exempt from the laws of nature. Causes, Laws, and Free Will defends a thesis that has almost disappeared from the contemporary philosophical landscape by arguing that this philosophical flight from common sense is a mistake. We have free will even if everything we do is predictable given the laws of nature and the past, and we are morally responsible whatever the laws of nature turn out to be. The impulses that tempt us into thinking that determinism robs us of free will spring from mistakes -- mistakes about the metaphysics of causation, mistakes about the nature of laws, and mistakes about the logic of counterfactuals.
This book investigates whether the existence of causal determinism is compatible with human free will and moral responsibility. Kadri Vihvelin, a professor of philosophy, challenges the prevailing contemporary view that determinism necessitates the absence of agency. By analyzing the metaphysics of causation and the logic of counterfactuals, she argues that common sense regarding moral responsibility remains intact regardless of the physical laws governing the universe.
What You Will Find
Philosophers and students of metaphysics frequently cite this work as a significant contribution to the compatibilist literature. The text is noted for its technical precision and its systematic dismantling of arguments that rely on flawed metaphysical assumptions.
Page Count:
296
Publication Date:
2013-06-05
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199795185
ISBN-13:
9780199795185
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