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Comparing Van Inwagen And Dennett's Free Will

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Van Inwagen and Dennett’s free will
Question1. Free will according to Van Inwagen is that a person can choose to act in a certain way while the person was in a position to act exactly the opposite way or in another way. According to Dennett, it does not matter at all that the person could have done otherwise and this should not be used in moral judgements. The theory of Determinism says the world is influenced by cause and effect system that for everything in this world there is a cause which acts upon the existing state of the world to produce an effect on the world. The change in the world is determined by the cause and there are laws that govern the cause and effect system. Van Inwagen argues that Determinism and free will are incompatible, Dennett argues that they are. Van Inwagen presents a …show more content…

The judge can stop the execution by raising her hand. If the theory of Determinism is held then the judge cannot raise her hand and stop the execution as the judge is part of the world that follows laws which have determined the execution should take place. Dennett in support of his argument gives the example of robots sent to Mars. One robot performed an action that destroyed another and this situation was not envisaged while designing the robots. The robot’s action is as per Determinism, it followed some pre-set laws. Dennett argues it does not matter, the design can be improved and hence free will is compatible with Determinism. Dennett’s argument seems to be more accurate. Take the case of the judge in Van Inwagen’s case. If the judge were to stop the execution, she could have taken action in advance for prevention of it. Whether she succeeds in it or not, she would be acting on a free will, and theoretically, it is perfectly possible for the judge not to land in a situation where she was unable to raise her hand. Hence Van Inwagen’s argument of

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