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Discussion and Debate
Discussion and Debate
Ethics & Morality
Free will and determinism
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<blockquote data-quote="durangodawood" data-source="post: 77678845" data-attributes="member: 200668"><p>In no part of that did the past change. Only the future changed relative to the past. Monday still happened, and all the ugly Monday feelings were felt. The past is fixed.</p><p></p><p></p><p>I do think the principle of cause-effect is more universally fundamental than the principle of human agency. And the principle of cause-effect is sufficient to explain human behavior and change. We do what we do for reasons that precede the act.</p><p></p><p>(Note that I do cling to the principle of human agency as <em>a matter of faith</em>. But the <em>reasoning</em> challenges it, as Ive shown).</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Yes. Some reason for change comes along,<em> then</em> you change - and not before.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="durangodawood, post: 77678845, member: 200668"] In no part of that did the past change. Only the future changed relative to the past. Monday still happened, and all the ugly Monday feelings were felt. The past is fixed. I do think the principle of cause-effect is more universally fundamental than the principle of human agency. And the principle of cause-effect is sufficient to explain human behavior and change. We do what we do for reasons that precede the act. (Note that I do cling to the principle of human agency as [I]a matter of faith[/I]. But the [I]reasoning[/I] challenges it, as Ive shown). Yes. Some reason for change comes along,[I] then[/I] you change - and not before. [/QUOTE]
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