Contents
Acknowledgments |
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Introduction |
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Chapter One: Agency |
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1. |
Semantics |
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2. |
Two Points of Reference |
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3. |
Individuality |
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4. |
Purpose/Intention |
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5. |
Sensibility |
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6. |
Thought and Perception |
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7. |
Competence and Skill |
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8. |
Effort |
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9. |
Partners |
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10. |
Efficacy |
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11. |
Oversight |
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12. |
Frustration |
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13. |
Will |
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Chapter Two: Free Will |
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1. |
Introduction |
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2. |
Background |
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3. |
Freedom To and Freedom From |
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4. |
Ontology |
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5. |
Universal Determinism |
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6. |
Explanation/Prediction |
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7. |
Cause or Capacity |
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8. |
Leibniz or Laplace |
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9. |
“Things Are Not Up to Us.” |
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10. |
Emergent Wholes, Their Properties and Powers |
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11. |
Character/Sensibility |
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12. |
Initiative |
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13. |
Productive Imagination |
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14. |
Consciousness |
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15. |
Choosing Freely |
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16. |
Last Thoughts |
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Chapter Three: Socialization |
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1. |
Conflicted Aims |
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2. |
Idiosyncrasy |
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3. |
Talent |
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4. |
Interiority |
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5. |
Social Space |
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6. |
Normativity |
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7. |
Socialization |
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8. |
Collaboration, Cooperation, Command |
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9. |
Cities |
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10. |
Disequilibrium |
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Chapter Four: Autonomy |
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1. |
Minerva |
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2. |
Semantics |
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3. |
Assertion |
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4. |
Self-Identification |
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5. |
Collaboration/Contention |
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6. |
Regulation |
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7. |
Oversight |
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8. |
In Itself, For Itself |
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Chapter Five: Moral Identity |
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1. |
Three Perspectives: Agents |
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2. |
Three Perspectives: Nodes |
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3. |
Three Perspectives: The Whole |
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Afterword |
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Bibliography |
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Index |