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Great Philosophical Debates

Free Will and Determinism

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Do you make your own choices or have circumstances beyond your control already decided your destiny? For thousands of years, this question has intrigued and perplexed philosophers, scientists, and everyone who thinks deliberately about how they choose to live and act. For if free will makes us accountable for our choices, does the opposite hold true, that determinism absolves us of responsibility?The implications of how we resolve this great question can affect everything from the small choices we make every day to our perspective on criminal justice and capital punishment. Now you can begin - or continue - your own exploration of this fundamental issue in a series of thought-provoking lectures from an award-winning scholar acclaimed as one of the most innovative thinkers now working at the intersection of philosophy and psychology. Beginning with an explanation of the fundamental approaches to this debate, Professor Nichols prepares you for an in-depth study of the complexities of free will and determinism. You learn what great thinkers through the ages have believed about the choices we make and understand how we might deal with their implications. Professor Nichols looks at each side of every argument, creating a balanced perspective that invites you to come to your own conclusions about whether or not we control our lives.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      One cannot help appreciating Professor Nichols's brisk, enthusiastic informality, especially the simple, lucid way he clarifies intricate concepts from a plethora of sources. Specifically, he delves into quantum mechanics, neuroscience, game theory, psychology, and other disciplines, in addition to straight philosophy, to argue whether humans possess free will or human decisions--indeed all natural phenomena--are predetermined by everything that has come before. What makes the age-old free will versus determinism debate significant, as the lecturer emphasizes, is its impact on the principle of moral responsibility. Lacking free will, how can anyone be held morally responsible for his or her actions? Nichols takes up this question at length in the concluding lectures, along with tangential issues related to crime and punishment. Y.R. (c) AudioFile 2009, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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