(We are in the "after hours" for this thread now!) — tinman917
OK so we got two meanings. I'm trying to figure out what the significance of lacking "philosophical free-will" is?
I mean in terms of attitudes of blame towards the agent. Is it the same or different to the significance of lack of "legal free-will"? If different then how different?
(P. S. "two different meanings"?? I'm worried there might be three. At least!
So (sorry to repeat, but just to be clear) what is the answer to the "is it the same or different?" question in my last post. — tinman917
Using the Jack being bribed and Jack at gunpoint scenarios from my earlier posts as examples of (the absence of) "philosophical" and "legal" free-will respectively.
But then it seems as if saying that Jack has no "philosophical" free will isn't saying anything at all.
Because we are still going to treat him as blameworthy ("deserving" of imprisonment etc) in the same way we would if we had said he does have "philosophical" free will. Which suggests that really we think he does have such free will. — tinman917
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