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The implications of experimental philosophy and moral psychology for the problem of free will

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dc.contributor.advisor Mungwini, Pascah
dc.contributor.advisor Coetser, Yolandi
dc.contributor.author Elzerman, Garth Harold
dc.date.accessioned 2022-04-01T12:40:23Z
dc.date.available 2022-04-01T12:40:23Z
dc.date.issued 2021-12
dc.date.submitted 2022-04
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10500/28670
dc.description.abstract The problem of free will has a long and intricate history. The millennia of development of the problem have seen the evolution of numerous free will viewpoints. A cursory look at the evolution of the concepts of free will and determinism, the various arguments, counterarguments, complex adjustments to arguments, the variety of sources of empirical research, and empirical insights illustrate the complexity of the debate. This elaborate reality opens itself to a pluralist account of free will and moral responsibility capable of accommodating this complexity and apparent contradiction. In this dissertation, I present such a pluralist account. I argue that a pluralistic approach to free will and moral responsibility makes room for discontinuities, accounts for conflicting free will values and regret, and acknowledges dissimilar responses to moral responsibility situations. I lay out the framework for this approach by engaging with free will research from moral psychology, investigating the findings of the sciences, such as neuroscience and physics, and considering our common-sense understanding of free will. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (v, 128 leaves) : color illustrations, color graphs
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Free will en
dc.subject Moral responsibility en
dc.subject Determinism en
dc.subject Empirical findings en
dc.subject Compatibilism en
dc.subject Incompatibilism en
dc.subject Libertarianism en
dc.subject Experimental philosophy en
dc.subject Moral psychology en
dc.subject Pluralism en
dc.subject.ddc 123.5
dc.subject.lcsh Free will and determinism en
dc.subject.lcsh Responsibility en
dc.subject.lcsh Pluralism en
dc.title The implications of experimental philosophy and moral psychology for the problem of free will en
dc.type Dissertation en
dc.description.department Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology en
dc.description.degree M.A. (Philosophy)


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