Sunday, November 25, 2012

Blog 8: Free Will and Determinism


Blog 8: Free Will and Determinism

Are our lives pre determined or do we decide our own fate? In the play “Oedipus the King” and the film Minority Report, two perspectives are shown on how much free will and control people have over their own lives. The play “Oedipus the King” portrays an idea that despite what action we take to change our destiny nothing can change the fate that the gods have chosen for us. Oedipus knew what his future would be and by trying to use his free will to avoid his fate instead it lead him right to it. In order to have free will, a person must have more than one option and the ability to choose that other option. (Huemer 104) The characters in this play believed that their futures were pre determined and nothing could alter their destiny so they did not believe in free will because they did not believe in an alternate possibility.

In the film Minority Report, the society shown to us relied on determinism, the idea that that only one future is possible. In the movie people were arrested before actually committing a crime. These arrests were “made possible by the ‘precogs’, a trio of prescient individuals working for the police who foresee crimes that are going to occur if the cops do not intervene.” (Huemer 103) Later in the film, the police realize that the system is flawed because there is no certainty that the person is going to commit any crime. John Anderton proved the system wrong when he chose to not kill the man who claimed he killed Anderton’s son. At first the people in the film Minority Report believed they had no free will but their views changed after Anderton showed them that they had the power to choose their fate. 

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