Showing posts with label Free Will. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Free Will. Show all posts

Monday, August 11, 2008

Anicius Manlinus Severinus Boethius (475 - 526)

For Boethius, Neoplatonist universals are only objects of rational minds. A rational nature possesses free will as its acts of volition cannot belong to physical causal chains. Reason allows for a higher degree of freedom (defined as Man's capability of causing his own course of actions by his own means). The more blinded by ignorance or obssessed with vicious passions, the more enslaved; conversely, the more rational, the more free.

Modern Reflection  
Boethius’s reconciliation of divine foreknowledge with human freedom anticipates modern debates about determinism, time, and the nature of perspective. His idea that God sees all moments simultaneously resembles contemporary discussions about block‑universe theories in physics. While his theological framework differs from secular approaches, his distinction between necessity and conditionality remains influential in philosophy of action. He reminds modern readers that freedom can be understood not only through causal analysis but also through the standpoint from which events are viewed.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Proclus Lycaeus (412 - 485)

Proclus holds the One (Neoplatonist unifying divine principle beyond being and thought) as the origin of the entire existence. The One fosters the Intellect situated outside time, and it is due to this divine Mind that multiplicity is possible in both thought and existence. Processuality arises with the Intellect's temporal product, the Soul, whose individual occurrences tend to be overpowered by the material world. Man will attain freedom only insomuch as he can, through reason, liberate his soul from the domination of bodily passions.

Modern Reflection  
Proclus’s intricate system of emanation and return mirrors modern attempts to understand complex systems through hierarchical structures and interdependent layers. His belief that freedom involves participating consciously in the order of reality parallels contemporary discussions about meaning, purpose, and the search for coherence in a fragmented world. Although his metaphysical architecture is far removed from modern science, his insistence that the mind seeks patterns and unity remains relevant. He suggests that agency grows when we understand how our actions fit within larger structures of value and order.

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Aurelius Augustinus (354-430)

For Augustinus, God is the immutable origin of the rationally hierarchical universe, in which there is a fundamental contrast between the intelligible and the sensible. The world of the sense includes only non-shareable transitory objects whereas the intelligible realm contains public, eternal realities. Man’s free will is defined as the rational choice between perishable objects and immutable ones. Augustinus shows that the compatibility of divine predestination (as well as foreknowledge) and freedom of will derives from Man’s responsibility for his choices.

Plotinus (204 – 270)

Founder of Neoplatonism, Plotinus states that the core of all existence is the indefinable One, whose Intellect makes the primal principle of the universe. The creative action of this divine Mind fosters the Soul, the place where the world takes objective shape. Individual souls must employ their power of conscious will in order to free themselves from the limits of their material reliance and contemplate the higher order of reality. Plotinus is the first thinker to put forth the idea that human happiness is independent of the physical world and can only be attained within consciousness due to Man’s faculty of reason.


Modern Reflection  

Plotinus’s idea that the self is layered (ranging from the embodied personality to a higher, unified intellect) anticipates modern discussions about consciousness, depth psychology, and the distinction between surface experience and deeper awareness. His view that freedom increases as we align with our highest capacities resembles contemporary ideas about self‑actualization and inner coherence. While his metaphysics can feel remote to modern readers, his emphasis on inward attention and the cultivation of clarity resonates strongly in an age of distraction. He offers a vision of agency grounded not in external choice but in the quality of one’s inner life.


Friday, July 25, 2008

Epictetus (55 – 135)

Man is free to manage his existence by accepting what is divinely predetermined and making appropriate choices when it comes to his own proceedings. Epictetus states that personal fulfillment depends largely on the individual character. The character can become a decisive factor in being in charge of one’s life through assiduous preparation as to how to control one’s perceptions, impulses to act (or not to act) and irrational drives.

Modern Reflection  
Epictetus’s distinction between what is in our control and what is not has become a cornerstone of modern psychology, especially cognitive‑behavioral therapy. His view of freedom as rational self‑governance resonates strongly in an age of anxiety, distraction, and external pressure. At the same time, his strict acceptance of fate can feel challenging to modern readers who value autonomy and social change. Yet his core insight remains powerful: freedom begins with attention to our own judgments and the discipline to act on them.

Seneca (4 BC – AD 65)

"A well governed appetite is the greater part of liberty," this theoretician of free will points out. Seneca insists that natural events should be explained through natural laws. Although the order of things is divinely predetermined, the soul (which is corporeal, monadic and rational) allows knowledge to influence proceeding. Inner impulses will lead to action in the absence of external impediments. Man manifests freedom of will in that he can control his actions by means of judgment and perform voluntary, virtuous deeds.

Modern Reflection  
Seneca’s reflections on anger, fear, and the instability of fortune read like early explorations of emotional intelligence. His view that freedom lies in mastering destructive impulses aligns with modern research on self‑regulation and resilience. At the same time, his wealth and political entanglements complicate his message for contemporary audiences, raising questions about privilege and moral consistency. Still, his writings offer a vivid reminder that freedom is inseparable from the work of shaping one’s character.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Titus Lucretius Carus (99 BC- 55 BC)

Human beings’ view on the external world is truthfully built on their sense data. The limitless universe is a purposeless ongoing cosmic event consisting of matter and void. Matter is composed of a finite number of undying atoms, the swerve motion of which is regarded by Lucretius as the basis for the existence of free will. Man, whose soul will disintegrate with the body at death, can achieve happiness through self denial and moral discipline.

Modern Reflection  

Lucretius presents a poetic defense of freedom grounded in a universe of atoms and motion, offering one of antiquity’s earliest attempts to reconcile human agency with natural science. His rejection of superstition and fear of the gods parallels modern efforts to understand behavior without resorting to supernatural explanations. While his physics is outdated, his psychological observations (especially about anxiety, desire, and the search for tranquility) feel strikingly contemporary. His work suggests that freedom grows when we understand the forces that shape us and learn to live without terror of the unknown.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Marcus Tullius Cicero (106 BC – 43 BC)

As a skeptic, Cicero states that there is no true philosophy due to the fact that Man can never be certain in his knowledge about reality. As a stoic humanist, he believes there is a natural law stemming from universal reason. Since human beings share both the natural law and reason, Man’s actions are only partially predetermined while he enjoys free will quite to a significant extent.

Modern Reflection  
Cicero’s eclectic approach to philosophy mirrors modern attempts to synthesize insights from multiple disciplines rather than commit to a single system. His use of Academic Skepticism to guide ethical and political judgment anticipates contemporary debates about how to act responsibly when knowledge is uncertain. Although he was not a systematic philosopher, his reflections on duty, probability, and public life remain relevant in an age shaped by complex information and competing values. He suggests that freedom involves navigating uncertainty with prudence rather than waiting for perfect clarity.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Philo (20 BC - 50 AD)

Likely the founder of Christianity, Philo considers the world a divine creation: God is "the efficient cause," whereas matter is "the affected cause." Although essentially defective, the physical nature of man allows the spirit to build knowledge of the world by means of the senses. The spiritual nature of Man is higher due to reason, which can control irrational desires and has access to heavenly things. 

Modern Reflection  
Philo’s blend of Greek philosophy and Jewish theology anticipates modern attempts to reconcile scientific reasoning with spiritual or cultural identity. His view that the human mind participates in a divine rational order parallels contemporary discussions about meaning, transcendence, and the grounding of values. While his allegorical method differs from modern scholarship, his effort to integrate reason and faith remains relevant. He suggests that freedom involves aligning personal intention with a larger moral structure.

Antiochus (130 BC - 68 BC)

Antiochus’ philosophy focuses primarily on the criterion of truth and the goal of Man’s life. The human intellect is considered capable of distinguishing truth from falsehood. Reason, as the most important part of human nature, should be valued best since it helps supress emotions and attain virtue, the chief good that leads to happiness.

Modern Reflection  
Antiochus’s attempt to harmonize Plato, Aristotle, and the Stoics anticipates modern efforts to integrate diverse philosophical traditions into a coherent worldview. His belief that virtue and rational order form the basis of freedom resonates with contemporary discussions about character and moral psychology. While his system lacks the metaphysical boldness of later Platonism, it offers a practical framework for understanding agency. He shows that freedom can emerge from synthesizing insights rather than choosing between extremes.

Posidonius (135 BC - 51 BC)

The universe shows an organic unity in its structure and development. Passions (both spirited and desiderative) are inherent in human nature but Man can control them through reason, which should become his dominant faculty. 

Modern Reflection  
Posidonius’s attempt to integrate emotion, cosmology, and psychology makes him surprisingly relevant to modern interdisciplinary thought. His recognition that human behavior is shaped by both rational and non‑rational forces anticipates contemporary models of the mind that blend cognition, biology, and environment. Although his metaphysics may feel distant to modern readers, his effort to explain agency within a complex, interconnected world mirrors current attempts to reconcile freedom with scientific understanding.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Carneades (214 BC – 129 BC)

An atheist and a radical skeptic, Carneades is the first to claim that metaphysicians have failed to identify rational meanings in religious beliefs. Neither senses nor reason can allow people to acquire truth: all knowledge is impossible, except for the knowledge that all other knowledge is impossible. People manage to live and act correctly by means of probabilities of truth, the only ones that can be determined. The world is the result of chance, but human beings can freely choose what to do due to their “free movement of mind” and the ability to be the cause of their own actions.

Modern Reflection  
Carneades’s insistence that certainty is unattainable anticipates modern discussions about probabilistic reasoning, cognitive bias, and the limits of human knowledge. His idea that we must act on the most persuasive evidence rather than absolute truth resembles contemporary approaches in science, law, and everyday decision‑making. While his skepticism can seem destabilizing, it also encourages intellectual humility and flexibility in the face of incomplete information. He offers a model of freedom grounded not in certainty but in the responsible management of doubt.

Zeno of Citium (334 BC - 262 BC)

Zeno is the architect of Stoicism, which urges people to lead a life of virtue in accordance with nature in order to achieve peace of mind and goodness: “Happiness is a good flow of life.” The Universe is a godly entity whose Universal Reason inspires Man to rationalize and exert his free will by building knowledge and avoiding the dominance of the irrational. 

Modern Reflection  
Zeno’s early Stoicism presents freedom as the harmony between rational understanding and the order of nature. This idea parallels modern discussions in neuroscience and philosophy of mind about agency within a lawful universe. His insistence that virtue is the only true good challenges today’s consumer‑driven definitions of success. While his system can feel austere, it offers a compelling alternative to the modern tendency to equate freedom with limitless choice rather than disciplined intention.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Epicurus (341 BC – 270 BC)

Epicurus insists that knowledge comes from senses (if properly used): nothing should be believed except that which is tested through direct observation and logical deduction. The infinite and eternal universe is an agglomeration of atoms, whose purposeless motions and interactions result in the observable phenomena. Although the nature of human beings’ mind is a material one, occasional swerves in the movement of atoms allow for people’s autonomy of decision and action. Man’s existence is the pursuit of a happy life, which can be attained by pleasure (regarded as the absence of pain and fear), a type of psychological hedonism that leads to the ethical strategy “neither to harm nor be harmed”.

Modern Reflection  
Epicurus’s idea that freedom requires a break in strict physical determinism anticipates modern debates about randomness, quantum events, and the limits of causal explanation. His emphasis on simple pleasures, friendship, and the avoidance of unnecessary desires resonates strongly with contemporary discussions about well‑being and minimalism. At the same time, his reliance on the atomic “swerve” can feel speculative to modern readers who expect scientific precision. Yet his core insight remains relevant: much of human freedom lies in reducing fear, clarifying desires, and choosing a life shaped by calm rather than compulsion.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Theophrastus (371 BC - 287 BC)

For Theophrastus, the necessity of universal principles derives from the corporeal and composite nature of the world. Space (defined as the arrangement and position of bodies) has no substance, and neither has time; time is an accident of motion, which in turn is the result of all activity. There is no difference between the way animals and human beings feel, sense, and reason. Man's happiness depends on not only personal effort but also external influences: "Life is ruled by fortune, not wisdom." 

Modern Reflection  
Theophrastus’s interest in character types and moral psychology makes him unexpectedly relevant to modern personality theory. His observations about how temperament shapes action anticipate contemporary research on traits, dispositions, and behavioral tendencies. While his classifications can feel impressionistic, they highlight the idea that freedom is influenced by stable patterns of response rather than isolated decisions. He offers an early attempt to understand agency through the lens of psychological diversity.

Stilpo (380 BC - 330 BC)

Stilpo maintains that the individual (the concrete) never contains the universal (the genus). Since predicates cannot reveal the essence of things, the phenomenal world will always remain unapproachable to true knowledge. Man can reach his highest happiness by freeing his mind from the control of passion.

Modern Reflection  
Stilpo’s emphasis on inner independence and emotional resilience parallels modern discussions about boundaries, detachment, and psychological self‑sufficiency. His claim that external losses cannot harm the truly wise anticipates contemporary ideas about internal locus of control. Although his stance can seem austere, it highlights the tension between vulnerability and autonomy in modern life. He suggests that freedom involves cultivating a stable center that is not easily shaken by circumstance.

Sunday, July 6, 2008

Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC)

Involving both the genus and the difference, definitions are propositions about the fundamental nature of a subject. For Aristotle, propositions are true if there is an agreement with the reality they represent. The truth can be reached by means of the logic syllogism, the laws of contradiction, and that of excluded middle. Disrespect for these laws would result in the uniformity of all assertions and in apathy concerning one’s conduct. Aristotle regards ethics as Man’s effort to identify his chief end. In fact, the world as a whole (whose ground consists of its concrete objects) is a constant transformation of matter toward an end. Man reaches his purpose or happiness by developing the learned faculty of controlling his irrational side through reason. The “autonomy of will” thus attained allows for voluntary actions, whose causes lie within Man himself.

Modern Reflection  
Aristotle’s account of voluntary action and moral responsibility anticipates modern debates about intention, character, and the conditions under which people can be held accountable. His view that freedom grows through habit and practice aligns with contemporary research on skill formation and behavioral change. While his teleological worldview differs from modern naturalism, his emphasis on practical wisdom and the cultivation of stable dispositions remains influential. He presents freedom not as a momentary choice but as a lifelong project of shaping one’s character.

Friday, July 4, 2008

Diogenes of Sinope (412 BC - 323 BC)

One of the founders of Cynicism, Diogenes mocks conventions and affectation of knowledge that satisfies no necessity. He regards reason as the faculty that frees Man from passion or beastliness and guides him away from errors and toward personal fulfillment. For Diogenes, happiness has nothing to do with material circumstances whereas ethical conduct grounds on the return to nature’s minimalism.

Modern Reflection  
Diogenes’s radical rejection of social conventions anticipates modern critiques of consumerism, status culture, and performative identity. His insistence that freedom comes from needing little resonates with contemporary minimalist and anti‑materialist movements. While his confrontational style can feel extreme, his core message (that autonomy grows when we stop seeking approval) remains powerful. He challenges modern readers to consider how much of their behavior is shaped by habit, expectation, or fear rather than genuine choice.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Speusippus (407 BC-339 BC)

For Speusippus, the first cause of all beings cannot be a being itself (principle of alien causality). He divides philosophy into Dialectics, Ethics and Physics and insists that producing a complete definition requires identifying the differences which draw an object apart from the rest (genera and species). Speusippus regards Man as able to reach happiness (untroubledness) by means of rational control over his desires.


Modern Reflection  

Speusippus’s attempt to refine Plato’s system by separating ethics from metaphysics mirrors modern efforts to ground moral reasoning without relying on grand cosmological structures. His focus on the conditions for achieving a balanced life anticipates contemporary discussions about well‑being and psychological flourishing. Although his writings survive only in fragments, his approach suggests that freedom involves understanding the factors that contribute to a stable and harmonious character. His work points toward a more empirical, less mystical interpretation of agency.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Plato (428 BC – 348 BC)

In Plato’s ontology, the good is the ultimate principle of a reality split into two irreconcilable domains: the spiritual and its shadow, the material. The first to put forth the idea of knowledge as justified true belief, Plato states that the processual and unstable world of material phenomena merely allows for opinions, whereas the realm of non-sensible and immutable forms (intelligible ideas) can offer pure knowledge. It is only reason which can ensure a person’s inner harmony through the control it should exert over will and desires. Thus, will can only manifest freely under the influence of knowledge of the good and of the truth.

Modern Reflection  
Plato’s model of the soul as a conflict between reason, desire, and spirit parallels modern theories of the mind that emphasize competing drives and internal negotiation. His idea that freedom requires harmony among these parts resonates with contemporary discussions about self‑regulation and psychological integration. Although his metaphysical framework is distant from modern science, his insight that freedom is tied to inner order rather than external license continues to shape ethical and political thought. He offers a vision of agency grounded in self‑knowledge and disciplined aspiration.