Category:Free will ontology: Difference between revisions
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A very complicated, long-debated concept which may ultimately be incoherent. There have been many different models of it over the decades and centuries, and there are sure to be at least a few more. | A very complicated, long-debated concept which may ultimately be incoherent. There have been many different models of it over the decades and centuries, and there are sure to be at least a few more. | ||
(For any particular claim applying to religion, if it already fits in this category, put it here instead.) | |||
== In traditional philosophy == | == In traditional philosophy == | ||
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[[Category:Existentialist-Structuralist tradition ontology]] | [[Category:Existentialist-Structuralist tradition ontology]] [[Category:Theological propositions ontology (Christianity)]] [[Category:Theological propositions ontology (Buddhism)]] |
Latest revision as of 05:08, 25 June 2025
A very complicated, long-debated concept which may ultimately be incoherent. There have been many different models of it over the decades and centuries, and there are sure to be at least a few more.
(For any particular claim applying to religion, if it already fits in this category, put it here instead.)
In traditional philosophy[edit]
- pronounced S–617 pronounced [S] Free Will (pronounced C) 11 -1 -
In religion[edit]
- pronounced [S2] Individual choices immediately shape the health of society 11 -1 -
In existential materialism[edit]
- [S] social event horizon (C) 11 -1 -
Pages in category "Free will ontology"
The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.