Nature's Challenge to Free Will

Nature's Challenge to Free Will book cover

Nature's Challenge to Free Will

Author(s): Bernard Berofsky (Author)

  • Publisher: OUP Oxford
  • Publication Date: 5 Jan. 2012
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 290 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0199640017
  • ISBN-13: 9780199640010

Book Description

Hardly any attempt to come to grips with the classical problem of free will and determinism directly addresses the metaphysical vision driving the concerns of those who believe that a significant sort of free will cannot exist in a deterministic world. According to this vision of such a world, all events, including human decisions and actions, take place as they must because the world is governed by necessity. Most philosophers who believe that free will is possible in a deterministic world ignore this root position, often regarding it as sufficient to cite considerations about moral responsibility, human agency, or the prerequisites for a society.

Bernard Berofsky addresses that metaphysical picture directly. Nature’s Challenge to Free Will offers an original defense of Humean Compatibilism. A Humean Compatibilist bases the belief in the compatibility of free will and determinism on David Hume’s view that laws do not affirm the existence of necessary connections in nature. Berofsky offers a new formulation of Hume’s position, given that, until now, there has been no acceptable version. His conclusion that free will is compatible with determinism is based as well upon a defense of the existence of psychological laws as autonomous relative to physical laws. He rejects appeals to the unalterability of laws (as in the Consequence Argument) on the grounds that this principle fails for psychological laws. Efforts to bypass this result by trying to establish that all laws are reducible to physical laws or that psychological states supervene on physical states are shown to fail. Berofsky concludes that the existence of free will as self-determination together with the power of genuine choice is not threatened even if we live in a deterministic world.

Editorial Reviews

Review

In this rich and powerful book, Bernard Berofsky defends Humean compatibilism about free will and determinism, the view that freedom is compatible with determinism because the only reason to believe otherwise is based on the false metaphysics of necessitarianism . . . I recommend the book highly. Incompatibilists should take note. ― David Palmer, Mind

Bernard Berofsky has provided a rich and densely argued defence of Humean compatibilism … Berofsky’s approach to these topics brings together work in philosophy of science and metaphysics with the philosophy of action. Drawing on these areas allows him to defend an overlooked theory with rigor, and in the process provide positive contributions to discussions of laws and the philosophy of science. ― Christopher Richards, The Review of Metaphysics

a sophisticated and technical argument for compatibilism . . . Berofsky addresses intelligently a vast assortment of ideas and arguments. ― S. P. Schwartz, Choice

admirable, rigorously argued, and thoroughly researched . . . This rich and appealing work, refreshingly focusing on aspects of, or elements that bear on, the free will debate that have been insufficiently addressed, deserves, and will undoubtedly attract close critical scrutiny. ― Ishtiyaque Haji, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews

Book Description

Presents original theories of free will and the laws of nature

About the Author

Bernard Berofsky is Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University. He completed his PhD at Columbia University, and has held positions at the University of Michigan and Vassar College. Since 1970 he has been editor of the Journal of Philosophy. Berofsky is the author of Liberation from Self: A Theory of Personal Autonomy (Cambridge, 1995), Freedom from Necessity: The Metaphysical Basis of Responsibility (Routledge, 1987), Determinism (Princeton, 1971), and the editor of Free Will and Determinism (Harper & Row, 1966).

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