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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. Is one's life determined or is it the result of free will? In establishing the answer to this question, it is essential that one understand the difference between the two representations. When one is cast forward by way of determinism, it is as though one has absolutely no control over the various and sundry occurrences that take place during one's life. Free will, on the other hand, speaks to the concept of having full authority over one's aspirations and ultimate direction, reflecting the exact opposite of those ruled by determinism. Having adequately grasped the meaning behind these divergent perspectives, it
can easily be argued that life is one's own responsibility; instead of leaving all things up to fate, an individual has a significant influence upon his or her own existence. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCfrewl.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
essential that one understand the difference between the two representations. When one is cast forward by way of determinism, it is as though one has absolutely no control over
the various and sundry occurrences that take place during ones life. Free will, on the other hand, speaks to the concept of having full authority over ones aspirations and
ultimate direction, reflecting the exact opposite of those ruled by determinism. Having adequately grasped the meaning behind these divergent perspectives, it can easily be argued that life is ones
own responsibility; instead of leaving all things up to fate, an individual has a significant influence upon his or her own ultimate existence.
Of all the influential people of this century, Roger Wolcott Sperry will be remembered as one who brought significant understanding the issues of the human mind. His
work with regard to mind-brain connection, consciousness, free will and humanistic values was instrumental in setting forth commonsensical interpretations of ideas that had heretofore been out of the grasp of
comprehension. Sperry believed that humanity is not made up of unconscious robots that have no control over their being, but is rather a self-determined lot whose "actions are macro-determined
by the reasons and values which occupy the highest, conscious level of our organismic structure" (Bissell, no date, p. indexmm1.html). It was clear to Sperry that man differed greatly
from the rest of the animal kingdom in that human actions are primarily motivated not only by the very basic of all inherent survival tactics -- physical impulses, pleasure/pain and
desire/aversion -- but just as much by the virtue of thoughts, judgments, beliefs and values. Behind Sperrys theory was the concept of "being in touch" (Bissell, no date, p.
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