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Provides a comprehensive, cutting-edge, and accessible accompaniment to various narratives about free will
A Companion to Free Will is an indispensable resource for anyone interested in the philosophy of free will, offering an authoritative survey of perennial issues and contemporary debates within the field. Bringing together the work of a diverse team of established and younger scholars, this well-balanced volume offers innovative perspectives and fresh approaches to the classical compatibility problem, moral and legal responsibility, consciousness in free action, action theory, determinism, logical fatalism, impossibilism, and much more.
The Companion’s 30 chapters provide general coverage of the discipline as well as an in-depth exploration of both CAP (Classical Analytic Paradigm) and non-CAP perspectives on the problem of free will and the problem of determinism—raising new questions about what the free will debate is, or should be, about. Throughout the book, coverage of modern exchanges between the world’s leading philosophers is complemented by incisive commentary, novel insights, and selections that examine compatibilist, libertarian, and denialist viewpoints.
Offers a balanced presentation of conflicting theories and ongoing debates about the nature, existence, and implications of free willExplores the role of scientific advances and empirical methods in contributing to discourses on free will and action theoryReviews new developments in longstanding arguments between compatibilist and incompatibilist approaches to free will including those that question this way of framing the debate and critique the standard terminologyDiscusses descriptive, revisionary, and pragmatic approaches for defining key concepts and addressing compatibility problems surrounding free willConsiders various issues of moral responsibility and philosophical approaches to the problem of free will in new waysPart of the acclaimed Blackwell Companions to Philosophy series, A Companion to Free Will is essential reading for undergraduate and graduate students of philosophy, professional philosophers and theorists, and interested novices alike.