Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the philosophical idea of free will.
Free
will - the extent to which we are free to choose our own actions - is
one of the most absorbing philosophical problems, debated by almost
every great thinker of the last two thousand years. In a universe
apparently governed by physical laws, is it possible for individuals to
be responsible for their own actions? Or are our lives simply proceeding
along preordained paths? Determinism - the doctrine that every event is
the inevitable consequence of what goes before - seems to suggest so.
Many
intellectuals have concluded that free will is logically impossible.
The philosopher Baruch Spinoza regarded it as a delusion. Albert
Einstein wrote: "Human beings, in their thinking, feeling and acting are
not free agents but are as causally bound as the stars in their
motion." But in the Enlightenment, philosophers including David Hume
found ways in which free will and determinism could be reconciled.
Recent scientific developments mean that this debate remains as lively
today as it was in the ancient world.
With:
Simon Blackburn
Bertrand Russell Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge
Helen Beebee
Professor of Philosophy at the University of Birmingham
Galen Strawson
Professor of Philosophy at the University of Reading
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