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    People believe that when A causes B, A compels or forces B. — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Resistance to compatibilism based on necessity is confused, because it conflates causal necessity with compulsion or force.

    People believe that when A causes B, A compels or forces B.

    Causation
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    Causation

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    Free Will & Foreknowledge2 linkedTruth & Knowledge1 linked

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    Hume argues this belief is a mistake: causal necessity is only constant conjunct...If causal necessity does not involve force or compulsion, then necessity per se ...Resistance to compatibilism based on necessity is confused, because it conflates...

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    The second source of resistance to compatibilism stems from confusion about necessity. People are prone to think that necessity rules out liberty because they conflate necessity with compulsion or force. They believe that when A causes B, A compels or forces B. Hume holds that this is a mistake, however. Causal necessity is nothing more than the “constant conjunction” of similar objects and a customary inference of the mind from the one to the other (EHU 8.1.5). For example, experience shows tha

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