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Informationen zum Autor Robert Kane is University Distinguished Teaching Professor of Philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin. He is the author of Free Will and Values (1985), Through the Moral Maze (1994), and The Significance of Free Will (1996, winner of the first annual R. W. Hamilton Faculty Book Award). Klappentext Free Will brings together the essential readings in the debate about free will and determinism.Written by top scholars in the field, the essays represent some of the clearest and most accessible thinking on this subject. The introduction offers a concise yet thorough mapping of this age-old debate as well as a helpful overview of the selections. To what extent are we truly free? Are our actions determined? If so, are we morally responsible for our actions? And does such determinism necessarily conflict with free will? This volume covers wide-ranging issues in the debate about free will, including the distinction between freedom of choice and freedom of will, moral responsibility, determinism, and compatibility. This compact collection of some of the best and most provocative writing on free will is ideal for anyone who wants to explore this complex problem. Zusammenfassung Free Will brings together the essential readings on the debate of free will and determinism. Written by top scholars in the field! the essays represent some of the clearest and most accessible thinking on this subject. The introduction offers a concise yet thorough mapping of this age--old debate as well as a helpful overview of the selections. Inhaltsverzeichnis Acknowledgments. Introduction (Robert Kane). Part I: The Free Will Problem: Standard Positions: Compatibilism! Libertarianism! Hard and Soft Determinism. 1. Walden Two: Freedom and the Behavioral Sciences (B. F. Skinner). 2. The Compatibility of Freedom and Determinism (Kai Nielsen). 3. Human Freedom and the Self (Roderick Chisholm). 4. Hard and Soft Determinism (Paul Edwards). Part II: The Compatibility / Incompatibility Question: Alternative Possibilities and Moral Responsibility. 5. The Incompatibility of Free Will and Determinism (Peter van Inwagen). 6. I Could Not Have Done Otherwise ---- So What? (Daniel Dennett). 7. Frankfurt--style Examples! Responsibility and Semi--compatibilism (John Martin Fischer). 8. The Explanatory Irrelevance of Alternative Possibilities (Derk Pereboom). Part III: Hierarchical Motivation! Deep Self Theories and Reactive Attitudes: New Compatibilist Theories. 9. Freedom of the Will and the Concept of a Person (Harry Frankfurt). 10. Sanity and the Metaphysics of Responsibility (Susan Wolf). 11. Responsibility and the Limits of Evil; Variations on a Strawsonian Theme (Gary Watson). Part IV: The Intelligibility Question: Libertarian or Incompatibilist Views of Free Agency and Free Will. 12. The Mystery of Metaphysical Freedom (Peter van Inwagen). 13. The Agent as Cause (Timothy Oa Connor). 14. Freedom! Responsibility and Agency (Carl Ginet). 15. Free Will: New Directions for an Ancient Problem (Robert Kane). 16. Chess! Life and Superlife (David Hodgson). Part V: Religion and Free Will: Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom. 17. Divine Foreknowledge! Evil! and the Free Choice of the Will (St. Augustine). 18. God! Time! Knowledge and Freedom: The Historical Matrix (William Hasker). Glossary. Bibliography. Index. ...