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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
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    A free decision requires experiencing that the singular c... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→A decision that bypasses the ordeal of undecidability is not a free decision

    A free decision requires experiencing that the singular case does not fit established codes and that a decision therefore seems impossible

    Free Will & ForeknowledgeMoral Responsibility
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    Moral ResponsibilityFree Will & Foreknowledge

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    A decision that bypasses the ordeal of undecidability is not a free decisionA decision that does not pass through this ordeal is merely the programmable app...The programmable application of a calculable process is not freedom

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    A decision that bypasses the ordeal of undecidability is not a free de...81%Strict calculation—mechanically following a code—is unjust because it ...75%If a decision followed a rule calculably, it failed to respect the sin...73%God's free knowledge is subject to God's free decision73%

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    SEP: derrida
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    Derrida calls the first aporia, “the epoche of the rule” (Deconstruction and the Possibility of Justice, pp. 22–23). Our most common axiom in ethical or political thought is that to be just or unjust and to exercise justice, one must be free and responsible for one’s actions and decisions. Here Derrida in effect is asking: what is freedom. On the one hand, freedom consists in following a rule; but in the case of justice, we would say that a judgment that simply followed the law was only right, n

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