An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 07  Metaphysics 4  (Metaphysical Determinism) –  Part 7: Summary – Do you remember what you ate last night?

Much of life unfolds on autopilot, guided by habits, routines, and forces we rarely examine. Determinism asks whether free will is something we possess continuously, or something that appears only in rare interruptions. Philosophy doesn’t demand that we escape the system entirely, but it invites us to notice when the code breaks. Perhaps freedom isn’t constant control, but the conscious choice to wake up, even briefly, from the routine.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 07  Metaphysics 4  (Metaphysical Determinism) –  Part 3: Why did you do that?

Determinism suggests that much of our behavior unfolds before conscious awareness arrives on the scene. When we say “I don’t know why I did that,” we may be acknowledging that causes were already in motion. Philosophy invites us to reconsider free will not as total spontaneity, but as something shaped by habits, conditioning, and learned responses. The deeper question becomes not why we act, but how our patterns were formed in the first place.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 07  Metaphysics 4  (Metaphysical Determinism) –  Part 2: Will you have the usual?

Much of what we call choice unfolds automatically, guided by habits and patterns formed long before we notice them. Determinism invites us to look beneath conscious decision-making and recognize how repetition, comfort, and familiarity shape our behavior. When we see how often we choose “the usual,” we begin to question how much of our lives are authored in advance by routines we rarely examine.

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