David K. Johnson argues that there is no free will because propositions in some sense already exist and are already true (or are already false); hence, since it is already true that I will do x tomorrow, it follows that I cannot not-do x tomorrow.
I'll try to argue with him on his own terms.
Isn't the very existence of these propositions contingent?
If yes, then it's hard to believe that something contingent could do the sort of necessitating that DKJ has it doing.
If no -- if these propositions had to be -- then there is something rather god-like about them. Too god-like to be plausible for a materialist like DKJ.
I'll try to argue with him on his own terms.
Isn't the very existence of these propositions contingent?
If yes, then it's hard to believe that something contingent could do the sort of necessitating that DKJ has it doing.
If no -- if these propositions had to be -- then there is something rather god-like about them. Too god-like to be plausible for a materialist like DKJ.
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