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33VI. The Regularity Theory: TranslatabilityIn Determinism, Princeton University Press. pp. 179-220. 1971.
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35The Irrelevance of Morality to FreedomBowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy 2 38-47. 1980.
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155Liberation From Self: A Theory of Personal AutonomyCambridge University Press. 1995.This is a detailed, sophisticated and comprehensive treatment of autonomy. Moreover it argues for a quite different conception of autonomy from that found in the philosophical literature. Professor Berofsky claims that the idea of autonomy originating in the self is a seductive but ultimately illusory one. The only serious way of approaching the subject is to pay due attention to psychology, and to view autonomy as the liberation from the disabling effects of physiological and psychological affl…Read more
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116Hume and the Problem of Causation by Tom L. Beauchamp and Alexander Rosenberg (review)Journal of Philosophy 80 (8): 478-492. 1983.
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90Nature's Challenge to Free WillOxford University Press USA. 2012.Bernard Berofsky addresses that metaphysical picture directly.Nature's Challenge to Free Willoffers an original defense of Humean Compatibilism.
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20XII. Deterministic Theories and the Observable WorldIn Determinism, Princeton University Press. pp. 291-297. 1971.
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234Free will and the mind–body problemAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 88 (1). 2010.Compatibilists regard subsumption under certain sorts of deterministic psychological laws as sufficient for free will. As _bona fide_ laws, their existence poses problems for the thesis of the unalterability of laws, a cornerstone of the Consequence Argument against compatibilism. The thesis is challenged, although a final judgment must wait upon resolution of controversies about the nature of laws. Another premise of the Consequence Argument affirms the supervenience of mental states on physica…Read more
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Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Action |
| Theories of Free Will |
| Topics in Free Will |
| Moral Responsibility |