Tag: Free will
-
The Structure of Madness
Madness is the belief in what is not. The common image of the madman who is Napoleon is crude, but correct: he affirms nothingness. Pursue this logic, and all are mad. We are mad in our faith that will originates action, that “if” governs “then.” This is humanity’s primordial error. The Faith in Contingency This…
Written by

-
Post 54 – The Paradox of Action: If Nothing Can Be Otherwise, Why Do We Strive?
The Question If we are a will, but our will is also our being and there is no becoming; if life unfolds as it is and not as a contingency subject to alternative options, then what is the use of trying to steer it one way or the other? If necessity determines all, what role…
Written by

-
Understanding the Structure of Being – 5
Free Will and the Necessity of Choice Few concepts feel as fundamental to human experience as free will. We live with the conviction that we are active agents, capable of making choices, shaping our lives, and determining our future. And yet, if everything that is must necessarily be—if reality unfolds as an eternal, immutable structure—where…
Written by

-
Understanding the Structure of Being – 4
The Fear of Nihilism: Is an Eternal Reality Meaningless? One of the most common reactions to the idea of an eternal, unchanging reality is the fear of nihilism—the belief that if everything is necessary and immutable, then life, existence, and even our individual actions might lack meaning. How can a world without change or progress…
Written by

-
Post 4 – Reconciling Free Will and Determinism: An Eternal Perspective
Change, Becoming, and the Nature of Being If Being is eternal and unchanging, as classical metaphysics suggests, then change and becoming seem contradictory. However, our experience of change is undeniable. How can we reconcile these two ideas? Being, as the fundamental reality, is consistent and indivisible. It cannot shift between existence and non-existence without ceasing…
Written by
