Freedom to do Otherwise and the Contingency of the Laws of Nature

Abstract

This article argues that the freedom of voluntary action can be grounded in the contingency of the laws of nature. That is, the possibility of doing otherwise is equivalent to the possibility of the laws being otherwise. This equivalence can be understood in terms of an agent drawing a boundary between self and not-self in the domains of both matter and laws, defining the extent of the body and of voluntary behaviour. In particular, the article proposes that we can think of `will' as naming the component of the laws of nature delimited by this boundary.

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2024-12-20

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