It’s not the fact that you can’t predict other people’s actions that proves the existence of free will, it’s that you observe your own self making choices.
So, you’re saying you don’t assign any of the proposed answers to the homework exercise in Dissolving the Question even a half-decent probability of being correct? That’s interesting. Please explain your reasoning.
It’s not the fact that you can’t predict other people’s actions that proves the existence of free will, it’s that you observe your own self making choices. So, you’re saying you don’t assign any of the proposed answers to the homework exercise in Dissolving the Question even a half-decent probability of being correct? That’s interesting. Please explain your reasoning.