Active Doings and the Principle of the Causal Closure of the Physical World Cover Image

Active Doings and the Principle of the Causal Closure of the Physical World
Active Doings and the Principle of the Causal Closure of the Physical World

Author(s): Ansgar Beckermann
Subject(s): Metaphysics, Epistemology, Ontology
Published by: Filozofický ústav SAV
Keywords: Active doings; agent causation; causal closure of the physical world; free will; Martine Nida-Rümelin; subject causation;

Summary/Abstract: Some philosophers hold that it would be impossible for us to do something actively if the physical world were causally closed, i.e., if in the physical world all events were caused by other physical events if they are caused at all. The reason for this view is that these philosophers adhere to what I call the traditional picture of action. Recently, Martine Nida-Rümelin tried to defend this picture by phenomenological considerations. According to the traditional picture a behavior can only count as something an agent does actively if it is ultimately caused by the agent in an agent-causal way. In this paper I adduce three arguments against agent causation: (1) We do not really understand what agent causation is. (2) If agent causation were real, we would be confronted with the strange fact that human agents can only cause certain tiny events in the brain. (3) There is no empirical evidence that agent causation is real. In the last part of my paper I present an alternative account of the difference between what agents do actively and what is done to them.

  • Issue Year: 26/2019
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 122-140
  • Page Count: 19
  • Language: English