An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 09 – God 1 (Theism) – Part 1: Introduction: Where do babies come from?

existence. Philosophy of religion asks us to pause before the doctrines and definitions, and return to the moment of awe that first gave rise to the word. Before belief, before systems, before certainty, we were simply standing at the edge of understanding, asking: Why is there something instead of nothing?

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 08 – Metaphysics 5 (Metaphysical Libertarianism) – Part 7: Summary: What, me worry?

The tension between free will and determinism may not be a dichotomy at all. Compatibilism invites us to see both forces as part of the same unfolding process, rather than opposing forces. Instead of fighting for one or the other, we can embrace the truth that we are the dance itself – not separate from the universe, but a dynamic part of it. Philosophy invites us to live fully in that dance, where choice and causality coexist in fluid, unpredictable harmony.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 08 – Metaphysics 5 (Metaphysical Libertarianism) – Part 6: What does God look like?

Genesis tells us humanity is made in the “image of God,” but what if that image isn’t physical? What if it’s the power to create from nothing, to choose beyond the constraints of cause and effect? Metaphysical libertarianism suggests that the truest form of freedom – the ability to decide, to act outside the law of causality – is the closest we come to expressing divinity. Philosophy invites us to notice those moments when we create, unbidden, and realize that in those flashes, we reflect the image of the Creator.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 08 – Metaphysics 5 (Metaphysical Libertarianism) – Part 5: Are you a flesh-bot?

If we are merely following a script, then rebellion becomes impossible. Metaphysical libertarianism argues that true freedom is found in the ability to step outside the prescribed pattern, to make choices that defy the “puppet strings.” Even if freedom is imperfect, it’s real when we break the chain and act beyond the limits we’ve known. Philosophy doesn’t promise us perfect choices, but it invites us to make those imperfect, free choices again and again.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 08 – Metaphysics 5 (Metaphysical Libertarianism) – Part 4: Can you touch a thought?

What if free will isn’t just about choosing between pre-determined options? What if, in rare moments, we make choices that break the chain of cause and effect entirely? In metaphysical libertarianism, these uncaused decisions—like a magician pulling something out of nowhere—offer a glimpse of true freedom, where choice exists outside the expected, outside the pattern, and simply is.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 08 – Metaphysics 5 (Metaphysical Libertarianism) – Part 3: Have you weighed the pros and cons?

Deliberation creates space between impulse and action. When we pause to weigh reasons, we interrupt habits and open new pathways for choice. Metaphysical libertarianism suggests that freedom may live not only in spontaneity, but in these moments of reflection, where we reconsider what seemed inevitable and allow ourselves to act differently than our past would predict.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 08 – Metaphysics 5 (Metaphysical Libertarianism) – Part 2: Have you ever surprised yourself?

Some choices don’t arrive through deliberation. They appear suddenly, without warning, explanation, or clear cause. Metaphysical libertarianism takes these moments seriously, asking whether spontaneity might be evidence of genuine agency rather than randomness. Philosophy invites us to notice when a decision feels uncaused yet still unmistakably ours, as if freedom slipped in through a side door.

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An Introduction to Philosophy (RLL style) Week 08 – Metaphysics 5 (Metaphysical Libertarianism) – Part 1: Introduction What are you having for dinner?

Metaphysical libertarianism invites us to consider whether every moment holds genuine alternatives. Like particles in quantum superposition, our choices may not be fully settled until we act. Philosophy asks whether freedom lives in those brief moments of hesitation, when routine loosens and multiple possibilities feel real. Sometimes, changing your mind isn’t a glitch at all, but an opening.

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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 6: Is your phone listening to you?

Our devices don’t need to listen to us to understand us. They read patterns. Clicks, pauses, habits, and repetitions reveal preferences we may not consciously recognize. Determinism invites us to notice how much of our behavior is predictable, even to machines. Yet philosophy leaves room for something interesting: the moment a pattern breaks. Perhaps freedom doesn’t arrive as total control, but as the rare and meaningful glitch.

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