Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
But goodness can choose to change its nature if it has true freedom of will.
Both notions are required to explain freedom of will and responsibility.
There's no way to standardize motivation and freedom of will.
He has freedom of will, as do all living beings upon Krynn.
The play debates freedom of will and the consequential choice.
In this matter we only possess a negative freedom of will, a noluntas.
Doctrine states that God gave human souls an immutable freedom of will.
All other liberty is a compromise between our own freedom of will and the wills of those with whom we come in contact.
"Iraq can learn freedom of will and freedom of voting from Iran," he said.
Still believe in freedom of will, Kane?
But we all have freedom of will."
It robs us of our freedom of will.
"But what about freedom of will?"
We do solemnly swear and testify to our soundness of mind and freedom of will.
In his On the Freedom of Will, Schopenhauer draws a distinction between necessity and chance.
Didymus maintains freedom of will, which is however weakened through the fall of Adam of Eve.
Clayton realized, no matter how dimly, the full import of what he was being forced to surrender: his freedom of will, his sense of humanity.
He was attacked in an elaborate treatise by Samuel Clarke, in whose system the freedom of will is made essential to religion and morality.
It is enough to read the statement in Pirkei Avot: "Everything is predetermined but freedom of will is given."
God endowed man with freedom of will to work out his salvation and allowed the world to be a mixture of good and evil, light and darkness.
A sample question: "How satisfactory do you find Boethius' explanation of the compatibility of God's infallible knowledge and man's freedom of will?"
Within Roman Catholicism, the Jansenist movement, which the Church then declared heretical, also maintained that original sin destroyed freedom of will.
On Free Choice of the Will) is a book by Augustine of Hippo about the freedom of will.
Subjectively, Hawk knew that the assimilation process left no freedom of will, and that upon his rescue, Picard had been instrumental in defeating the Borg.
Modern compatibilists make a distinction between freedom of will and freedom of action, that is, separating freedom of choice from the freedom to enact it.