Not per Leibniz. He said that free will just amounts to the absence of contradiction in some alternate action being performed. I'm not saying you have to accept Leibniz's view. But since one of humanity's greatest minds contradicts you, you should put up some argument for your view. You can't just drop it on me as given.We treat the possibility as different from a logical possibility. — Metaphysician Undercover
Remember, we're talking about God and sin.There is quite a bit of evidence, such that it hurts one or more persons (including the doer of the action), it puts one or more persons at risk of hurt, or it brings about future suffering for one or more persons. — Agustino
Leibniz is dealing in logical possibility. So let's consider whether there really is any other kind of possibility. What argument would you put to Leibniz to convince him that there is? — Mongrel
I could choose to do something which is logically possible, but physically impossible, such as I might decide to grab a hold of the moon, or the sun, and bring it into my house with me. This demonstrates that what really determines what is and is not possible is something other than logic. — Metaphysician Undercover
You disagreed with me while saying exactly what I said. Neat trick, Pierre.then it is logically consistent with S both that P or that not P. It is fair to construe this as entailing physical possibility, meaning that for some proposition to be physically possible from the standpoint of an agent is for the truth of this proposition to be logically consistent with S. — Pierre-Normand
The logical possibility at issue in Leibniz's conception of free will would thus be a conditional possibility: it is conditional on the logical restrictions imposed on future states of the world by the past and by physical laws. — Pierre-Normand
You disagreed with me while saying exactly what I said. Neat trick, Pierre. — Mongrel
Leibniz is dealing in logical possibility. So let's consider whether there really is any other kind of possibility. What argument would you put to Leibniz to convince him that there is? — Mongrel
I'd point out that possibility is a complementary modality to necessity, and then I'd have him read Kit Fine's paper: http://philosophy.fas.nyu.edu/docs/IO/1160/necessity.pdfLeibniz is dealing in logical possibility. So let's consider whether there really is any other kind of possibility. What argument would you put to Leibniz to convince him that there is? — Mongrel
... If the human being cannot impose any restrictions whatsoever, on the external world, in what sense can you say that it has free will? To have free will, it must be logically possible that P, or not P, thus the human being must be capable of imposing the necessary restrictions to make this logically possible. The human being cannot make "P or not P" logically possible simply by asserting that it is logically possible, or else I could make it logically possible to grab a hold of the sun, by asserting that it is logically possible to do such. — Metaphysician Undercover
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