seigneur wrote:
DanielCC wrote:
Because if free will does not exist in its full sense, that of libertarian free will, then it casts moral responsibility into doubt.
Isn't libertarian free will absolute, which in turn would make moral responsibility also absolute? As such, wouldn't honest mistakes be as culpable as malicious acts?
Of course not. Virtually no ethically system will treat mistakes or unintended consequences as symptomatic of personal wickedness, as they lack the requisite intention.
seigneur wrote:
Imagination is absolutely free in libertarian sense, and that has its consequences too. I would definitely not want my will to be similarly free, with instant gratification and all the latter consequences.
What do you mean? There's a difference between imaginative association and deliberately imagining some thing but what is the relevance of imagination here? Maybe if one's imagination automatically created ex nihilo it would be relevant but even God can consider something as the case without actually making it so.
seigneur wrote:
Libertarian free will cannot be had and should not be craved after. Will works the way it works, limited and restricted. Better to learn to live with it.
Are you actually going to explain your position (let alone give arguments for it) or just sit there making vacuous New Atheistesque assertions?
Last edited by DanielCC (10/30/2018 9:38 am)