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Hard Versus Soft Determinism
Louis P. Pojman (1996) explains the difference between determinism, which is also known as hard determinism,[1] and compatibilism, which is also known as soft determinism.[2] Within determinism or hard determinism, God[3] causes an act and no created being is responsible for his or her moral actions,[4] while for compatibilism or soft determinism, although God causes actions, created beings are responsible where they act voluntarily.[5] The human will would be the secondary cause in human decisions. Persons would still therefore be morally responsible for moral actions. Pojman (1996: 596).
Louis P. Pojman (1996) explains the difference between determinism, which is also known as hard determinism,[1] and compatibilism, which is also known as soft determinism.[2] Within determinism or hard determinism, God[3] causes an act and no created being is responsible for his or her moral actions,[4] while for compatibilism or soft determinism, although God causes actions, created beings are responsible where they act voluntarily.[5] The human will would be the secondary cause in human decisions. Persons would still therefore be morally responsible for moral actions. Pojman (1996: 596).
Pragmatism
Pojman defines pragmatism as the theory that
interprets the meaning of a statement in terms of practical consequences.[6] Some judge the truthfulness or falseness of a
statement/proposition on whether or not it is pragmatic.[7] Gene Edward Veith, Jr., (1994) states ‘what
works and what’s[8]
practical’ is pragmatism.[9]
Cosmology
Whale writes that cosmology is looking at the
cosmos and visible universe from a theistic perspective denying that it is
self-explanatory.[10] Pojman mentions that theistic versions of
cosmology deduce something outside of the universe is required to explain its
existence.[11] Paul Edwards (1973) explains cosmology
reasons that all things come into being through other things,[12]
and since a causal series of events cannot go back in infinity, there must be a
first cause.[13] Thomas Aquinas is famous for discussing The
Five Ways and his cosmological argument within Summa Theologica.[14] Plantinga reasons that aspects of Aquinas’
presentation[15]
are reasonable, but overall the argument is unsuccessful.[16]
I reason this does not render all
arguments for first cause unsuccessful, but Plantinga points out difficulties
with Aquinas’ approach,[17]
which is perhaps too extensive.[18] Edwards comments[19]
would adequately explain a more modest and reasonable idea concerning first
cause.
AQUINAS, THOMAS (1261)(1920) Summa Theologica, Translated by Fathers
of the English Dominican Province,
London, Fathers of the English Dominican Province.
EDWARDS, PAUL AND ARTHUR PAP
(1973)(eds.), A Modern Introduction To
Philosophy, New York, The Free Press.
GEIVETT, R. DOUGLAS (1993) Evil and the Evidence for God,
Philadelphia, Temple University Press.
PLANTINGA, ALVIN C. (1977)(2002) God, Freedom, and Evil, Grand Rapids,
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
PLANTINGA, ALVIN C. (1982) The Nature of Necessity, Oxford,
Clarendon Press.
PLANTINGA, ALVIN C. (2000) Warranted Christian Belief, Oxford,
Oxford University Press.
POJMAN, LOUIS P. (1996) Philosophy: The Quest for Truth, New
York, Wadsworth Publishing Company.
SCHELLING, F.W.J. (1845)(1936) Schelling, Of Human Freedom, Translated
by James Gutmann, The Open Court Publishing Company, Chicago.
VEITH, GENE EDWARD, JR. (1994) Postmodern Times, Wheaton Illinois,
Crossway Books.
WHALE, J.S. (1958) Christian Doctrine, Glasgow, Fontana
Books.
[2] Pojman (1996: 596).
[3] This could be an outside force, as well,
that is not God. An atheist may be a
compatibilist and/or an incompatibilist, or one could hold to hard determinism. Schelling suggests that ‘absolute causal
power in one being leaves nothing but unconditional passivity for all the
rest.’ Schelling (1845)(1936: 11). This would be a difficulty with accepting hard
determinism.
[5] Pojman (1996: 596).
[6] Pojman (1996: 598).
[7] Pojman (1996: 598).
[8] Veith uses a contraction, which I do not
normally use in academic work.
[9] Veith (1994: 83).
[10] Whale (1958: 22).
[11] Pojman (1996: 37).
[13] Edwards (1973: 377-378).
[14] Aquinas, Thomas (1261)(1920) Summa
Theologica, Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province, London,
Fathers of the English Dominican Province.
[16] Plantinga (1977)(2002: 80).
[18] Aquinas’
presentation although classic and important, is very speculative and Plantinga
has disagreements with his overall work. Plantinga (1977)(2002: 80). Geivett reasons Plantinga is too negative concerning
natural theology as possibly working.
Geivett (1993: 59-60).
[19] Edwards (1973: 377-378).