Fr. 39.90

How Free Are We? - Conversations From the Free Will Show

English · Hardback

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Description

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Free will comes up in everyday conversations all the time. "She did that of her own free will." "He could have done something else instead." "It's my choice." "That's up to you." How we think about free will-and the closely-related concept of moral responsibility-is essential to how we think about our lives. We frequently praise and blame each other, and ourselves, for the choices we make, believing that this is appropriate because the person we're holding responsible possesses free will. But what does it mean to have free will? Do any of us have it at all? If so, then how much? These and related questions are at the heart of debates about free will in philosophy. How Free Are We? contains a collection of edited interviews from The Free Will Show, a podcast by the philosophers Taylor W. Cyr and Matthew T. Flummer, highlighting recent developments on the topic. In an accessible and conversational format, a variety of scholars introduce the main issues and arguments in the free will debate, including various apparent threats to free will-such as fatalism, foreknowledge, and determinism-as well as the Consequence Argument, and the problem of luck. After building this foundation, later interviews introduce main positions and questions in debates surrounding free will, including several varieties of libertarianism, compatibilism, a version of free will scepticism, and others that do not fit neatly into any of these categories. With original introductions, bibliographies, and suggestions for further reading to accompany each interview, in addition to an afterward and a glossary of terms, How Free Are We? serves as a primer for those seeking an introduction to the topic and a window into what leading philosophers are currently thinking about and debating in this field.

List of contents










  • Introduction: Let's Talk about Free Will

  • Chapter 1: Taylor Cyr and Matthew Flummer on Free Will Basics

  • Chapter 2: John Martin Fischer on Fatalism, Foreknowledge, and Determinism

  • Chapter 3: Alicia Finch on Logical Fatalism

  • Chapter 4: Linda Trinkaus Zagzebski on Divine Foreknowledge

  • Chapter 5: Peter van Inwagen on the Consequence Argument

  • Chapter 6: Alfred Mele on the Problem of Luck

  • Chapter 7: Carolina Sartorio on Frankfurt Cases

  • Chapter 8: Derk Pereboom on the Manipulation Argument

  • Chapter 9: Dana Kay Nelkin on Moral Luck

  • Chapter 10: Christopher Evan Franklin on Event-Causal Libertarianism

  • Chapter 11: Timothy O'Connor on Agent-Causal Libertarianism

  • Chapter 12: David Palmer on Non-Causal Libertarianism

  • Chapter 13: Gregg Caruso on Free Will Skepticism

  • Chapter 14: Helen Beebee on Classical Compatibilism

  • Chapter 15: Kadri Vihvelin on Dispositional Compatibilism

  • Chapter 16: Michael McKenna on Source Compatibilism

  • Chapter 17: Manuel Vargas on Revisionism

  • Chapter 18: Seth Shabo on Mysterianism

  • Afterword: Reflections on The Free Will Show

  • Free Will Glossary



About the author










Taylor W. Cyr is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Samford University. Prior to this, he was a lecturer in the philosophy department at Washington University in St. Louis. He has written several articles on issues at the intersection of ethics and metaphysics, focusing on free will and moral responsibility.

Matthew T. Flummer is Professor of Philosophy at Porterville College. His research, which primarily focuses on free will, moral responsibility, and the philosophy of religion, has appeared in various academic journals.


Summary

How Free Are We? contains a collection of edited interviews from The Free Will Show, a podcast by the philosophers Taylor W. Cyr and Matthew T. Flummer. In an accessible and conversational format, a variety of leading scholars introduce the main issues, questions, and arguments in the free will debate.

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