Can the Agency Theory Be Salvaged?

Philosophia Christi 3 (1):217-224 (2001)
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Abstract

Some of the most salient features of Randolph Clarke's causal agent-causal theory of free action are explicated and his theory critiqued. It is shown that invoking agent-causation is unnecessary and makes his theory cumbersome. For insofar as Clarke seeks to render the agency theory more intelligible by appealing to event-causation as contributing to the generation of basic actions, his theory gravitates closer to a causal indeterminist theory of free action.

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Andrei Buckareff
Marist College

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