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What does 'free will' mean?
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All Flashcards in Topic 1.6
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1.6.111 cards
What does 'free will' mean?
The genuine power to have done otherwise, with you as the source of the choice.
The 'could have done otherwise' test?
Rewind to the moment of choice — was another option really open? If yes, the choice was free.
Why isn't 'doing what you want' free will?
A drugged or manipulated person gets what they want without a real choice being open.
The feeling vs the fact of freedom?
Choosing feels open (the feeling); whether it really was open is a separate question (the fact).
Why does free will matter?
Praise, blame, regret and responsibility all assume you could have chosen differently.
Free will and moral responsibility?
If no one could ever have done otherwise, holding people responsible looks unfair and needs rethinking.
The puppet objection?
A feeling of freedom isn't proof — a puppet who couldn't feel its strings would still feel free.
Where does the freedom topic begin?
With the everyday feeling that a choice (like picking off a menu) is genuinely up to you.
Epictetus / Stoic inner freedom?
Real freedom is mastery over your own responses, not control of events — a prisoner can be free.
Outer vs inner freedom?
Outer: were my choices uncaused? Inner: am I master of my responses? Two different questions.
How do you reach the top band in Section A?
Weigh competing views on the evidence and reach a reasoned conclusion — don't just describe.
1.6.28 cards
What is determinism?
The view that every event, including every choice, is fully caused by earlier events.
The domino argument for determinism?
Choices are caused events; caused events are fixed by the past; so only one choice was ever possible.
What is hard determinism?
Determinism is true AND therefore free will is an illusion and no one is truly responsible.
How does hard determinism explain 'I could have chosen differently'?
As a gap in your knowledge — you don't see the hidden causes making the choice inevitable.
Does determinism deny that choices happen?
No — choices happen, but each is fully caused, so given the past only one was ever possible.
The 'medical model' of justice (Go further)?
If wrongdoers couldn't ultimately do otherwise, treat wrongdoing like a problem to fix, not a sin to punish.
Determinism vs free will — the clash?
Free will needs the power to have done otherwise; determinism says only one outcome was ever possible.
The leaf analogy?
Like a leaf sure it chose to fall while blind to the wind, we feel free while missing our causes.
1.6.38 cards
What is compatibilism?
The view that free will and determinism can both be true, because 'free' means unforced, not uncaused.
Dennett's account of freedom?
You're free when you act on your own desires without being forced — even if those desires were caused.
Dennett's shop example?
Choosing to take goods (caused but yours) vs being dragged out at gunpoint (forced) — that's free vs unfree.
What is incompatibilism?
The view that free will and determinism cannot both be true (van Inwagen).
Van Inwagen's objection?
If determinism is true, the past and laws fix everything, so you could never have done otherwise.
Why 'caused' isn't 'forced' (Dennett)?
A caused desire is still yours; a gunman's order isn't — so causation doesn't remove freedom.
The two senses of 'could have done otherwise'?
'If you'd wanted to' (Dennett) vs 'with the exact same past' (van Inwagen) — the sides talk past each other.
Three positions on freedom and determinism?
Hard determinist (no freedom); Dennett (compatible); van Inwagen (incompatible).
1.6.48 cards
What is socialization?
The healthy learning of the skills and rules to live with others — visible, questionable, and equipping.
What is social conditioning?
Being moulded to want or believe things without noticing — usually invisible, and it chooses for you.
The social-conditioning threat to freedom?
Your wants may be shaped for you, so a choice can feel free while running on tracks society laid.
Socialization vs social conditioning?
Socialization equips you to choose; conditioning does the choosing for you behind your back.
Why isn't conditioning 'all choice is unfree'?
Freedom comes in degrees — you're freer the less the shaping is hidden and unquestioned.
The freer response to conditioning?
Notice the shaping and ask whether you still endorse it, instead of pretending you're unshaped.
Freedom as a skill (Go further)?
The more you make hidden influences visible and re-examine them, the more your choices become genuinely yours.
How does the conditioning worry differ from determinism?
It's not physics fixing events — it's people and institutions shaping what you want.
1.6.58 cards
What is authenticity (existentialism)?
Living as your true self — owning your choices instead of running someone else's script.
What is bad faith?
Lying to yourself that you have no choice, to escape the responsibility of being free.
A classic example of bad faith?
Hiding in a role ('just doing the job') or a fixed nature ('it's just how I am') to dodge a choice.
Authenticity vs bad faith?
Authenticity owns your freedom; bad faith flees it with an excuse.
Do we choose our situation?
Not always — but you always choose your response to it, and that's where authenticity lives.
Why is authenticity hard?
Freedom is heavy and excuses are a relief; authenticity leaves you owning every choice with no script.
Is authenticity 'follow your gut' (Go further)?
No — a whim can be as unowned as a rule; the authentic act is one you consciously take responsibility for.
How does authenticity reframe freedom?
Not 'are you free at all?' but 'are you actually using your freedom, or hiding from it?'
1.6.69 cards
What did Sartre mean by 'condemned to be free'?
No fixed human nature, so you must choose who to be and are fully responsible — you can't escape your freedom.
Why 'condemned' rather than 'gifted'?
Because you can never escape freedom — every excuse is bad faith, so the responsibility is always yours.
What is angst (Sartre)?
The dread that comes from realising your choices are entirely your own, with no rulebook to lean on.
What did Epictetus say real freedom is?
Inner freedom — you can't control outer events, but you can always master your own responses to them.
Epictetus's striking claim about slaves and the rich?
An enslaved person can be inwardly free, while a rich person can be a slave to their own moods.
Where do Sartre and Epictetus agree?
Both locate freedom in your response, not your circumstances.
Where do Sartre and Epictetus split?
On the feel: Sartre's response-freedom is a burden (angst); Epictetus's is a relief (serenity).
The whole Freedom topic in one line?
Free will vs determinism · compatibilism · social conditioning · existential freedom (Sartre / Epictetus).
What lifts a Section A answer on freedom to the top band?
Exploring and weighing several views on the stimulus and reaching a reasoned conclusion — not describing one.
Topic 1.6 study notes
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