Michael Zwingli         
         
Mww         
         
Michael Zwingli         
         
Manuel         
         
180 Proof         
         
Mww         
         what would seem to be the best, most unique (lacking semantic overlap) definition of the term? — Michael Zwingli
the term has been used to mean different things by different people at various times. — Michael Zwingli
dimosthenis9         
         
Baden         
         
Michael Zwingli         
         Thus will is about ineluctability, like under duress, and an agency that desires that. In short, it's got to do with participation in the causal web as a cause and when that cause (agency) itself is causeless, we have free will. — TheMadFool
Michael Zwingli         
         Bloody killjoy! :razz: — Tom Storm
Michael Zwingli         
         The part of the things that happen in someone's life and he actually has a "say" on that. He can interfere with his thoughts, choices and acts. — dimosthenis9
I like sushi         
         
Joshs         
         irrespective of what other deem as 'good' or 'bad,' or 'right' or 'wrong' I should act as my will dictates and follow my path for my reasons not those imposed upon me by ideologies that possess people en masse.
I'm very fond of Nietzsche's views in this regard as they generally articulate a lot about how I view the world at large. — I like sushi
Tom Storm         
         He viewed the psyche as a community of selves and a multiplicity of conflicting drives. He even broke up the act of willing into a a tension between a commanding and an obeying. This certainly isn’t the ‘self’ and the ‘will’ of an autonomous subjectivity. — Joshs
dimosthenis9         
         
dimosthenis9         
         Nietzsche rejects the r idea of a unitary self or thinking ‘I’. He viewed the psyche as a community of selves and a multiplicity of conflicting drives. He even broke up the act of willing into a a tension between a commanding and an obeying. This certainly isn’t the ‘self’ and the ‘will’ of an autonomous subjectivity — Joshs
Joshs         
         Do you have a few thoughts on how you think he saw 'my will' working? — Tom Storm
Joshs         
         For Will, imo, he was considering it as the most important "natural" power we have as to change ourselves and break our spiritual limits.Becoming Ubermensch eventually. — dimosthenis9
Ciceronianus         
         Schopenhauer would say that it strives to interpret and reconcile external objects to a coherent subjective worldview. — Michael Zwingli
dimosthenis9         
         He is not just another idealist toady aiming at ‘personal growth’. — Joshs
But you’re not achieving real change and becoming until you learn to turn the frame on its head , to turn what seemed within the old scheme like evil into good and what seemed like good into evil — Joshs
I like sushi         
         He viewed the psyche as a community of selves and a multiplicity of conflicting drives. — Joshs
Joshs         
         He viewed the psyche as a community of selves and a multiplicity of conflicting drives.
— Joshs
Evidence? Where did you get that from. Not refuting it just curious as I've not read all of his stuff. — I like sushi
Michael Zwingli         
         Schopenhauer would say that it strives to interpret and reconcile external objects to a coherent subjective worldview.
— Michael Zwingli
That's odd, if he truly thought it to be not just blind, not just unconscious, but aimless as well. — Ciceronianus
Michael Zwingli         
         In the most colloquial sense 'will' could perhaps be parsed as 'pure determination'. — I like sushi
Michael Zwingli         
         "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law" - Crowley. — I like sushi
I like sushi         
         Good heavens, this is not Aleister Crowley, the English occultist, is it? — Michael Zwingli
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