2023-2024 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
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PHI 219 - Freedom & Responsibility Instructor
Griffith
The problem of free will is often cited as one of philosophy’s most difficult problems to resolve. As human beings, it seems that we are subject to laws of nature and to chains of cause and effect. But as personal agents, we feel strongly that we are autonomous beings whose choices and actions are not dictated by external factors. On the other hand, perhaps without external factors, our choices and actions would be random or chancy. Is that really the kind of autonomy we want or think we have? Free will is closely connected to moral responsibility. It seems that we need to have free will in order to be morally responsible for our choices and actions. Can we be responsible for predetermined actions? What about for undetermined ones? In this course we will discuss various philosophical approaches to these issues. Questions addressed may include: how should free will be characterized? Can we be morally responsible for our actions? What does it mean to be morally responsible? Does science give us reason to doubt free will or responsibility? If we don’t have free will and are not morally responsible, can we still have meaningful lives?
Satisfies a Philosophy major and minor requirement.
Satisfies the Philosophical and Religious Perspectives requirement.
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