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Books > Humanities > Philosophy > Topics in philosophy > Ethics & moral philosophy
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Elbow Room - The Varieties of Free Will Worth Wanting (Paperback, new edition)
Loot Price: R596
Discovery Miles 5 960
You Save: R70
(11%)
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Elbow Room - The Varieties of Free Will Worth Wanting (Paperback, new edition)
Series: Elbow Room
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List price R666
Loot Price R596
Discovery Miles 5 960
You Save R70 (11%)
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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A landmark book in the debate over free will that makes the case
for compatibilism. In this landmark 1984 work on free will, Daniel
Dennett makes a case for compatibilism. His aim, as he writes in
the preface to this new edition, was a cleanup job, "saving
everything that mattered about the everyday concept of free will,
while jettisoning the impediments." In Elbow Room, Dennett argues
that the varieties of free will worth wanting-those that underwrite
moral and artistic responsibility-are not threatened by advances in
science but distinguished, explained, and justified in detail.
Dennett tackles the question of free will in a highly original and
witty manner, drawing on the theories and concepts of fields that
range from physics and evolutionary biology to engineering,
automata theory, and artificial intelligence. He shows how the
classical formulations of the problem in philosophy depend on
misuses of imagination, and he disentangles the philosophical
problems of real interest from the "family of anxieties" in which
they are often enmeshed-imaginary agents and bogeymen, including
the Peremptory Puppeteer, the Nefarious Neurosurgeon, and the
Cosmic Child Whose Dolls We Are. Putting sociobiology in its
rightful place, he concludes that we can have free will and science
too. He explores reason, control and self-control, the meaning of
"can" and "could have done otherwise," responsibility and
punishment, and why we would want free will in the first place. A
fresh reading of Dennett's book shows how much it can still
contribute to current discussions of free will. This edition
includes as its afterword Dennett's 2012 Erasmus Prize essay.
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