A kantian conception of causality from Freedom
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Universidad Torcuato Di Tella
Abstract
Everything in nature works either according to laws or according to the representation
of laws. In the first case the effect is made to happen, independently of will; it pertains to the
context of natural causality. In the second case the effect occurs if and only if the cause wants it
to happen; it pertains to the context of causality from freedom.
In this context the laws by which one lets oneself be determined to act are self-chosen
so that one acts sua sponte. There are two versions of this kind of spontaneity: either one lets
oneself be determined to act by a moral law or by something else. Acts which are cases of
causality from positive freedom are derived from a moral law. Every other act could be called a
causal act from natural causality, if this weren't highly misleading. For if every act is a result of
freedom, so is an act which is performed because we let ourselves be determined by sensory
stimuli. Therefore, classifying this kind of act as an act from natural causality would be as
misleading as the case appears to be clear: Causality from freedom does not occur because what
one does is derived from~~ practical law, but because one lets oneself be determined to act.
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Filosofía del Derecho, Philosophy of law, Natural causality