- May 28, 2018
- 14,282
- 6,365
- 69
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Reformed
- Marital Status
- Widowed
Call them what you want. They do influence, and are therefore causal.I deny that options are antecedent conditions. They're not "conditions" at all. Options are currently existing options.
Nobody's saying YOU don't make the decision. That you couldn't have chosen otherwise is visible in the fact that YOU NEVER DO CHOOSE OTHERWISE.I already used C. S. Lewis to bring up the distinction between the two senses of the word "because" - the Cause and Effect sense, and the Ground and Consequent sense. The fact that you can make a decision based on a reason in no way means you didn't make a decision, or that you couldn't have chosen otherwise.
All history works against you here.
Meaningless distinction. Reasons are part of what causes.A reason is not always a cause. I can see where you get confused.
No, the reason is not what I claim nor what he claims nor what you claim. He may cite that as the reason, and, indeed, the fire was causal, as was everything that in anyway worked upon him concerning that fire, to include his joy in fighting fires, the booger in his nose and the fact his wife isn't fun to be around right now. The fact that it was a fire is only one of the reasons. The bear climbed over the mountain.Say I see firemen who've rushed to a burning building. I ask them why they went to the building. After looking at me like I'm stupid, one of them says "because the building is on fire, that's the reason we came". Read carelessly, or thought through carelessly, that could appear as if the cause and the reason are one and the same. But no, the fire is the reason, the cause is the fireman's choice to come.
Himself, of course, after all, being caused to exist, and so, to do, including to decide, and to have preferences. Caused.And there's not a force in the natural universe, past or present, which could have forced him to come, other than himself.
(Irritating, ain't I?)
Upvote
0