Discover the ideas shaping the debate on free will and moral responsibility.
This concise work examines what it means to be an agent with the power to choose, how liberty differs from mere action, and how Christian thought can inform our understanding of morality. Clear, thoughtful analysis guides readers through philosophical distinctions and practical implications for ethics, religion, and everyday life.
Against a backdrop of historic debates, the book contrasts philosophical necessity with real freedom, explores how motives, character, and divine agency interact, and asks what true moral accountability requires of us. It presents accessible arguments about how liberty can coexist with causation and how revelation can deepen or illuminate our sense of responsibility.
- Understand the difference between acting from choice and being constrained by forces beyond control.
- See how motives, virtue, and habit shape moral power and enduring freedom.
- Explore the role of Christian belief in motivating moral reform and personal responsibility.
- Learn how debates from Hume to Edwards inform contemporary discussions of will and determinism.
Ideal for readers curious about philosophy, theology, and the practical question of how we can live freely and rightly.