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Free Will

The question of free will is among the oldest and most consequential in philosophy. Do we genuinely choose our actions, or is every decision the inevitable result of prior causes? The debate touches neuroscience (Libet's experiments), physics (determinism vs. quantum indeterminacy), moral philosophy (can we hold people responsible without free will?), and lived experience (the overwhelming feeling that we could have done otherwise).

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Opens a guided conversation. 5 turns for anonymous visitors.

Major Territories
01
Compatibilism
Freedom and determinism are compatible — Frankfurt, Dennett, and the mainstream view
02
Hard Determinism
Every event is caused. Free will is an illusion. The implications are staggering
03
Libertarian Free Will
Genuine metaphysical freedom exists — agent causation and quantum indeterminacy
04
Libet's Experiments
The readiness potential: does your brain decide before 'you' do?
05
Moral Responsibility
Without free will, can punishment be justified? The stakes of the debate