Abstract
Conway characterizes freedom in apparently contradictory ways. She describes
God as the most free, yet he is necessitated to act perfectly due to his wisdom
and goodness. Created beings, by contrast, sin. They are not necessitated to do
so. This suggests that Conway has a binary account of freedom: divine freedom
is a matter of being necessitated by wisdom and goodness, whereas creaturely
freedom consists in indifference, understood as a power to act, or not act.
Despite the apparently conflicting remarks, I argue that Conway has a single
account of freedom as spontaneity. Conway defines spontaneity in terms of
causing one’s own action independent of external causes. I suggest that
spontaneity is more precisely understood as an intrinsic power aimed at the
good in Conway’s metaphysics, and that this account of freedom can
combine necessity and contingency. Rather than a binary, Conway offers an
account of freedom in creation that has it on a continuum with divine freedom.