Free Will and Moral Responsibility

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Free Will and Moral Responsibility
Free will and moral responsibility has always been one of the most basic and fundamental elements of philosophy. It is undeniable that there is a connection between free will and moral responsibility. Different philosophers throughout the ages have viewed this connection in both similar and differing ways. The first connection between free will and moral responsibility can be seen by Aristotle and Epictetus through their views of the voluntary and involuntary. It can then be seen in a differing view by Frankfurt in which a person is only free if they are free to have the will they want.
Aristotle believes that people seek pleasure while avoiding pain. He views the voluntary as something that would lead to pleasure while the involuntary as something that would lead to pain. A voluntary action would be an action that originates from the person. When a person is acting voluntarily the person is acting on their desires. An example of this can be when a person sees someone in trouble and then voluntarily goes to help. On the other hand an involuntary action would then originate not from within the person but instead from an outside force. Aristotle claims that all involuntary actions are actions which are compelled and due to them being compelled they are in turn also unpleasant as is anything else a person is forced to do. An example of an involuntary action could be when a person hands over money to a thief due to the thief holding a gun to the persons head. Aristotle also views an action which a person does in ignorance to be an involuntary action. While the ignorant action would also originate from the person and not an outside force it would cause an end that was neither desired nor foreseen. ...

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... for taking the drug even though the willing addict has no control over his will.
AS can be seen by the views of these three different philosophers free will and moral responsibility are undeniably connected. It is how the two are connected that can be debated as shown. Whether the connection be between our voluntary and involuntary actions as the two philosophers Aristotle and Epictetus go on to claim or if the connection between the two is only applied if we are free to have the will that we want to have as Frankfurt claims. Even then there are certain situations in each of those philosophers views where exceptions can come about making everything not so black and white proving that there is no true definition of the connection but instead leaving the connection between free will and moral responsibility up to the interpretation of the person trying to define it.

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