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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.52685/cjp.21.62.5

Two Accounts of the Problem of Enhanced Control

Damir Ćićić ; Belgrade, Serbia


Full text: english pdf 178 Kb

page 301-318

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Abstract

According to event-causal libertarianism, an action is free in the sense relevant to moral responsibility when it is caused indeterministically by an agent’s beliefs, desires, intentions, or by their occurrences. This paper attempts to clarify one of the major objections to this theory: the objection that the theory cannot explain the relevance of indeterminism to this kind of freedom (known as free will). Christopher Evan Franklin (2011, 2018) has argued that the problem of explaining the relevance of indeterminism to free will (which he calls “the problem of enhanced control”) arises because it is difficult to see how indeterminism could enhance our abilities, and disappears when we realize that beside the relevant abilities free will requires opportunities. In this paper, I argue that the problem occurs not because of the focus on abilities, but because of the difficulty to explain how indeterminism could contribute to the satisfaction of the sourcehood condition of free will in the framework of event-causal theory of action.

Keywords

free will; indeterminism; control; event-causal libertarianism; ability to do otherwise; alternative possibilities; sourcehood

Hrčak ID:

263197

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/263197

Publication date:

22.9.2021.

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