TIME, PREDESTINATION AND FREEWILL: A line of development in the thought of Arthur Prior
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TIME, PREDESTINATION AND FREEWILL : A line of development in the thought of Arthur Prior. / Hasle, Per Frederik Vilhelm.
2018. Abstract from Prior Day, Christchurch, New Zealand.Research output: Contribution to conference › Conference abstract for conference › Research › peer-review
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TY - ABST
T1 - TIME, PREDESTINATION AND FREEWILL
AU - Hasle, Per Frederik Vilhelm
PY - 2018/3/3
Y1 - 2018/3/3
N2 - In the early thought of Arthur Prior, the idea of predestination played a considerable role. While on one hand he as a (largely) committed Presbyterian accepted the idea in some form or other, it also troubled him even from a very early stage of his intellectual life. From 1949 till 1953 a transition took place. During this time, he gave up his wider ambition of writing a History of Scottish Theology (and without doubt a highly systematical ‘history’ it would have been) and instead turned to modal and tense logic. At the same time he grew to be a firm defender of the notion of free will. There is no doubt that the connection between time, logic and determinism vs. indeterminism was a crucial theme and motivation from 1953 and onwards in the thought of Prior. This included some penetrating analyses of the notion of foreknowledge and its tense-logical implications. In this talk I will however focus on the theme of predestination in Prior’s early thought. It appears that his struggle with and finally rejection of predestination played a significant part in his development from being a practicing Presbyterian to his interest in tense-logic and indeterminism - and his ‘agnosticism’, respectively abandonment of religious beliefs.
AB - In the early thought of Arthur Prior, the idea of predestination played a considerable role. While on one hand he as a (largely) committed Presbyterian accepted the idea in some form or other, it also troubled him even from a very early stage of his intellectual life. From 1949 till 1953 a transition took place. During this time, he gave up his wider ambition of writing a History of Scottish Theology (and without doubt a highly systematical ‘history’ it would have been) and instead turned to modal and tense logic. At the same time he grew to be a firm defender of the notion of free will. There is no doubt that the connection between time, logic and determinism vs. indeterminism was a crucial theme and motivation from 1953 and onwards in the thought of Prior. This included some penetrating analyses of the notion of foreknowledge and its tense-logical implications. In this talk I will however focus on the theme of predestination in Prior’s early thought. It appears that his struggle with and finally rejection of predestination played a significant part in his development from being a practicing Presbyterian to his interest in tense-logic and indeterminism - and his ‘agnosticism’, respectively abandonment of religious beliefs.
M3 - Conference abstract for conference
Y2 - 3 March 2018 through 3 March 2018
ER -
ID: 209134276