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What are the basic building blocks of the world? This book presents
a naturalistic theory saying that the universe and everything in it
can be reduced to three fundamental entities: a field, a set of
values that can be actualized at different places in the field, and
an actualizer of the values. The theory is defended by using it to
answer the main questions in metaphysics, such as: What is
causality, existence, laws of nature, consciousness, thinking, free
will, time, mathematical entities, ethical values, etc.? The theory
is compared with the main alternatives and argued to solve problems
better than the existing theories. Several new theories are
suggested, such as how to understand mental causation, free will
and the truth of ethics and mathematics.
A major goal for compatibilists is to avoid the luck problem and to
include all the facts from neuroscience and natural science in
general which purportedly show that the brain works in a
law-governed and causal way like any other part of nature.
Libertarians, for their part, want to avoid the manipulation
argument and demonstrate that very common and deep seated
convictions about freedom and responsibility are true: it can
really be fundamentally up to us as agents to determine that the
future should be either A or B. This book presents a theory of free
will which integrates the main motivations of compatibilists and
libertarians, while at the same time avoiding their problems. The
so-called event-causal libertarianism is the libertarian account
closest to compatibilitsm, as it claims there is indeterminism in
the mind of an agent. The charge of compatibilists, however, is
that this position is impaired by the problem of luck. This book is
unique in arguing that free will in a strong sense of the term does
not require indeterminism in the brain, only indeterminism
somewhere in the world which there plausibly is.
A major goal for compatibilists is to avoid the luck problem and to
include all the facts from neuroscience and natural science in
general which purportedly show that the brain works in a
law-governed and causal way like any other part of nature.
Libertarians, for their part, want to avoid the manipulation
argument and demonstrate that very common and deep seated
convictions about freedom and responsibility are true: it can
really be fundamentally up to us as agents to determine that the
future should be either A or B. This book presents a theory of free
will which integrates the main motivations of compatibilists and
libertarians, while at the same time avoiding their problems. The
so-called event-causal libertarianism is the libertarian account
closest to compatibilitsm, as it claims there is indeterminism in
the mind of an agent. The charge of compatibilists, however, is
that this position is impaired by the problem of luck. This book is
unique in arguing that free will in a strong sense of the term does
not require indeterminism in the brain, only indeterminism
somewhere in the world which there plausibly is.
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