What is my motivation in this post? I believe accepting our past mistakes as a product of past events that are outside us (partially our fault and partially the fault of others) is important in finding hope in the future. This is general philosophy or a general set of beliefs. — christian2017
How are things partially our fault if there is no free will? — Echarmion
Fault does not require free will. We talk without any difficulty at all, about how the sun "causes" the earth to warm up. We do not get caught up having to describe what then "causes" the sun to shine. So with a human action. If someone's actions result in some consequence, it's not unreasonable to talk about those consequences being that person's "fault" without having to get bogged down in arguments about whether they were the ultimate or merely proximal cause. — Isaac
it's unnecessarily confusing to use "fault" and "cause" interchangeably when those words have different meanings in common language use. — Echarmion
Why do we feel like we have free will? — christian2017
P.S: You seemed to weigh chemical reactions against laws of physics, in fact the former is covered by the latter. — Dzung
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