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Автор Odegard, Douglas
Дата выпуска 1984
dc.description Determinism in one sense is the theory that all events, including human actions, are governed by laws and hence are necessary. Some think that it can be refuted simply by identifying entrenched beliefs that contradict it, i.e., simply by establishing incompatibilism. Others think that this is not enough, that if determinists uncover the right sort of evidence, they can use that evidence against any contrary beliefs, however well entrenched. In that case, attention must be paid to contingent facts about human behaviour. Probably a combination of the two approaches is the best strategy. Obviously, ascertaining what the facts are, and what their relevance is, cannot be done independently of analysis and logic. Yet a concentration on incompatibilism seems particularly vulnerable to stalemate. Hence the need arises to investigate whether concepts formed during the analytical inquiry are actually true of anything, independently of questions of entrenchment. To confirm this suspicion about the limitations of analysis, I shall consider two perceptive and well-regarded arguments for thinking that determinism clashes with a belief in alternate possibilities.
Формат application.pdf
Издатель Cambridge University Press
Копирайт Copyright © Canadian Philosophical Association 1984
Название Analytical Approaches to Determinism
Тип research-article
DOI 10.1017/S0012217300044905
Electronic ISSN 1759-0949
Print ISSN 0012-2173
Журнал Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review
Том 23
Первая страница 271
Последняя страница 280
Аффилиация Odegard Douglas; University of Guelph
Выпуск 2

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