The Author(s) 2015. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract Can we sensibly attribute some of the happenings in our world to the agency of some of the things around us? We do this all the time, but there are conceptual challenges purporting to show that attributable agency, and specifically one of its most important subspecies, human free agency, is incoherent. We address these challenges in a novel way: rather than merely rebutting specific arguments, we discuss a concrete model that we claim positively illustrates attributable agency in an indeterministic setting. The model, recently introduced by one of the authors in the context of artificial intelligence, shows that an agent with a sufficiently complex m...
According to event-causal libertarianism, an action is free in the sense relevant to moral responsib...
Theories of free agency based on indeterminism -- that is, libertarian theories -- are often accused...
Free will is widely thought to require (i) the possibility of acting otherwise and (ii) the making o...
Can we sensibly attribute some of the happenings in our world to the agency of some of the things ar...
Can we sensibly attribute some of the happenings in our world to the agency of some of the things ar...
The aim of this paper is to establish that free agency, which is a capacity of many animals includin...
Libertarian views of freedom claim that, although determinism would rule out our freedom, we are nev...
The aim of this paper is to establish that free agency, which is a capacity of many animals includin...
In A Metaphysics for Freedom (Steward, Helen. A Metaphysics for Freedom. Oxford: Oxford University P...
Philosophical tradition locates questions about free will and agency within a debate characterised ...
Agent-causal libertarians maintain we are irreducible agents who, by acting, settle matters that are...
Theories of free agency based on indeterminism -- that is, libertarian theories -- are often accused...
In this paper I will address a specific luck argument that has been put forward against event causal...
Both a traditional notion of free will, present in human beings, and artificial intelligence are oft...
This paper is part of a symposium discussing Helen Steward's A METAPHYSICS FOR FREEDOM. Steward argu...
According to event-causal libertarianism, an action is free in the sense relevant to moral responsib...
Theories of free agency based on indeterminism -- that is, libertarian theories -- are often accused...
Free will is widely thought to require (i) the possibility of acting otherwise and (ii) the making o...
Can we sensibly attribute some of the happenings in our world to the agency of some of the things ar...
Can we sensibly attribute some of the happenings in our world to the agency of some of the things ar...
The aim of this paper is to establish that free agency, which is a capacity of many animals includin...
Libertarian views of freedom claim that, although determinism would rule out our freedom, we are nev...
The aim of this paper is to establish that free agency, which is a capacity of many animals includin...
In A Metaphysics for Freedom (Steward, Helen. A Metaphysics for Freedom. Oxford: Oxford University P...
Philosophical tradition locates questions about free will and agency within a debate characterised ...
Agent-causal libertarians maintain we are irreducible agents who, by acting, settle matters that are...
Theories of free agency based on indeterminism -- that is, libertarian theories -- are often accused...
In this paper I will address a specific luck argument that has been put forward against event causal...
Both a traditional notion of free will, present in human beings, and artificial intelligence are oft...
This paper is part of a symposium discussing Helen Steward's A METAPHYSICS FOR FREEDOM. Steward argu...
According to event-causal libertarianism, an action is free in the sense relevant to moral responsib...
Theories of free agency based on indeterminism -- that is, libertarian theories -- are often accused...
Free will is widely thought to require (i) the possibility of acting otherwise and (ii) the making o...