Judaism, Science, and Moral ResponsibilityYitzhak Berger, David Shatz Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2006 - 303 sayfa Do human beings have free will? Are they genuinely responsible for their actions? These questions have persisted all through the history of philosophy, but in the 21st century they have become defined more sharply and clearly than ever. Indeed, a vivid and mighty tension underlies today's intellectual struggles over free will. On the one hand, the rapid advances of several empirical disciplines, notably neuropsychology and genetics, threaten our instinctive affirmation that free will and moral responsibility exist. On the other hand, the depth and force of our instincts-our powerful intuition that there is free will, that there is moral responsibility-present, for most people, an almost impenetrable barrier against the sweeping denial of free will suggested by empirical research. The papers in this volume address this tension from a dual vantage point. While drawing heavily upon traditional Jewish texts and teachings, they also offer a blend of scientific, philosophical, psychological, and social insights into this most mystifying of topics. In addition, they illuminate the concept of repentance, a transformation of character that ranks in much of Jewish literature as the highest expression of free will. |
İçindekiler
Introduction | 1 |
A Scientific Perspective on Human Choice | 13 |
Genetics and Morality | 45 |
Telif Hakkı | |
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actions agent analysis argue behavior Benjamin Libet biological brain causal challenge cognitive compatibilism compatibilists complex concept conscious contemporary creative desire Dessler determinism deterministic dimensions discussion divine Dov Linzer emergent emesh emotional essay evil example experience fact Forking Paths Principle free choice freedom freely Freud genetic halakhah halakhic Hasidic Hilkhot human impossible indeterminism individual interpretation Jewish Jews Judaism Kook language laws mahar Maimonides Manekin means memory mental metaphysical microscopic mind Moral Responsibility mourning nature negativization neural neuronal neuroscience notion object one's patient person perspective Peter van Inwagen philosophical physical problem psychoanalytic psychological psychotherapy quantum question Rabbi Rambam Rashi reason refinding religious repentance repetition representation Resh Lakish role scientific sense Shabbat Shalom Carmy Soloveitchik soul speak symbolic Talmud term teshuvah theory thought tion Torah transformation understanding University Press Yeshiva Yeshiva University yetzer York