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Description: In How Free Will Works, Steven M. Duncan provides not merely discussions of, but potential answers to two of the most vexed questions discussed by philosophers concerning free choice. First, supposing that the mind and the body are separate substances of opposed natures, how is it possible for them to interact such that an entirely non-physical immanent mental act can give rise to changes in the external world? Second, supposing that there is free will, how is it possible for our acts of volition/free choice to be neither causally determined nor merely chance/random events? This…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Description: In How Free Will Works, Steven M. Duncan provides not merely discussions of, but potential answers to two of the most vexed questions discussed by philosophers concerning free choice. First, supposing that the mind and the body are separate substances of opposed natures, how is it possible for them to interact such that an entirely non-physical immanent mental act can give rise to changes in the external world? Second, supposing that there is free will, how is it possible for our acts of volition/free choice to be neither causally determined nor merely chance/random events? This book spells out a new way of envisaging the mind/body relation and the nature of mind/body causal interaction that avoids the traditional ""interaction problem."" It also explains how it is possible for free choice neither to require an efficient cause nor to act as an efficient cause while nevertheless affecting the processes in the physical world through which intentional action is realized in human behavior. In the second half of the book, the theory developed in the first part of the book is applied to the difficult issues arising from the Christian doctrine of salvation: sin, grace, and redemption. About the Contributor(s): Steven M. Duncan (PhD, University of Washington) currently teaches at Bellevue College and is the author of five books, including The Proof of the External World (Wipf and Stock, 2008).
Autorenporträt
Steven M. Duncan is the author of A Primer of Modern Virtue Ethics (University Press of America, 1995) and Being, Truth and Knowledge (Wadsworth, 2000). He has taught philosophy in colleges and universities for over thirty years. Duncan is currently a member of the adjunct philosophy faculty at Bellevue College.