Transcendent Philosophy, Na’eeni School, and Muhammad Taghi Ja’fari on Free will and Necessity

پژوهشنامه فلسفه دین 12 (2):159-184 (2015)
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Abstract

The relation between free will and necessity is one of the most important issues regarding the problem of “free will”. This is because of the rule which indicates that “being not necessary, an event would not be came off”. There has been an ongoing debate among theologians, philosophers and Jurists on whether this rule includes free actions. Sadrain Philosophers believe that this rule is inclusive of human free actions, while followers of the Na’eeni school endorse the opposite. In this article, after reviewing the views of philosophers and jurists on the stages of a free action, I shall explore the question whether human actions, stages of which are understood deterministic, could be regarded as free, and so, whether Na’eenian criticisms against philosophers are justified. Besides, I shall put forth some innovative ideas of Allameh Ja’fari concerning the issue, whose view, while revises some philosophers’, is not compatible with that of Na’eeni.

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Incompleteness and inconsistency.Stewart Shapiro - 2002 - Mind 111 (444):817-832.

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