The Causes of Determinism

Philosophy 50 (194):445 - 454 (1975)
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Abstract

If determinism is correct, then all that men do is in principle predictable. Further, all that they do is predictable in a certain way, namely on the basis of the causes of their actions, where those causes are sufficient for their actions. That is, according to determinism, the antecedents of human actions, their causes, are such that, given a knowledge of those antecedents, the actions that are their effects can be predicted with certainty because they cannot but occur

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Metaphysics.William H. Walsh - 1963 - Philosophy 40 (153):260-261.

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