The Freedom Will: The Existence Of Free Will

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What is free will (in other words, what do we mean when we say something like “we have (or lack) free will”?)?
Free will is the capacity that one has in choosing one’s own course of action, basically, having free will means that one has the ability to decide what one wants to do and he is the unique source of the decision. Moreover, free will is divided in two varieties, surface freedom and ultimate freedom; the first one is the ability to make your own choices to fulfill your desires, on the other hand, the second one is the power to form your own desires and then fulfill them. Most of the philosophers agree that the surface freedom exists and that we have it, however, the big question is in the existence of ultimate freedom.
In the discussion …show more content…

Some people argue that determinism is false and use the argument of the Quantum Theory that the world is probabilistic, however, this argument is only applicable to microscopic world, therefore, if the discussion is a human action, in other words, a macroscopic action, quantum probabilistic systems can be disconsidered.
Now, the great question here is about the compatibility of determinism and free will. Saying that a world is deterministic directly attacks the proposition of having ultimate freedom and, if determinism exists, it is not possible to have freedom of deciding future …show more content…

The first one questions the premise of laws of nature saying that our present laws of nature are the way they are because our free actions determined they to be so, basically, they could be different but our free will has changed them to be the way they are, so on, the determinism just reflects our free will. The second objection questions the supposition of always determining a likely scenario with the Frankfurt case, saying that is possible that one has the power of free will even if one has only one possible scenario, using the same example of the cake and the pie, imagine that the person thought that the pie was in the fridge and ate the cake, however, the fridge was empty. The person only had one choice to choose, however, the decision was made without being interfered by this

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