GraciousCall.org - Freedom of the Will Part II. Section II.
On the Freedom of the Will
by Jonathan Edwards
PART II. - SECTION II.
Several supposed ways of evading the foregoing reasoning considered.
Is to evade the force of what has been observed, it
should be said, that when the Arminians speak of the Will
determining its own acts, they do not mean that the Will
determines them by any preceding act, or that one act of
the will determines another; but only that the faculty or
power of Will, or the soul in the use of that power, determines its own volitions; and that it does
it without any
act going before the act determined; such an evasion
would be full of the most gross absurdity.-- I confess, it is
an evasion of my own inventing; and I do not know but
I should wrong the Arminians, in supposing that any of
them would make use of it. Bur, it being as good a one as
I can invent, I would observe upon it a few things.
First, If the power of the will determines an act of volition,
or the soul in the use or exercise of that power determines it,
that is the same thing as for the soul to determine
volition by an act of will, For an exercise of the
power of will, and an art of that power, are the same thing.
therefore to say, that the power of will, or the soul in the
use or exercise of that power, determines volition, without
an act of will preceding the volition determined, is a contradiction.
Secondly, If a power of will determines the act of the
Will, then a power of choosing determines it. For, as was
before observed, in every act of will, there is choice, and a
power of willing is a power of choosing. But if a power
of choosing determines the act of volition, it determines it
by choosing it. 1 or it is most absurd to say, that a power
of choosing determines one thing rather than another,
without choosing any thing. But if a power of choosing
determines volition by choosing it, then here is the act of
volition determined by an antecedent choice, choosing that
volition.
Thirdly, To say, that the faculty, or the soul, determines its own volition, but not by any act, is
a contradiction.
Because for the soul to direct, decide, or determine
any thing, is to act; and this is supposed: for the soul is
here spoken of as being a cause in this affair, doing something; or, which is the same thing,
exerting itself in order
to an effect, which effect is the determination of volition,
or the particular kind and manner of an act of will. But
certainly, this action is not the same with the effect, in order
to the production of which it is exerted; but must be something prior to it.
The advocates for this notion of the freedom of the Will,
speak of a certain sovereignty in the will, whereby it has
power to determine its own volition. And therefore the
determination of volition must itself be an act of the will;
for otherwise it can be no exercise of that supposed power
and sovereignty. Again, if the Will determines itself, then
either the will is active in determining its volitions, or it is
not. If active, then the determination is an act of the will;
and so there is one act of the will determining another. But
if the Will is not active in the determination, then how does
it exercise any liberty in it? These gentlemen suppose that
the thing wherein the Will exercises liberty, is in its determining its own acts. But how can
this be, if it be not active in determining? Certainly the
will, or the soul, cannot exercise any liberty in that wherein it doth not act, or
wherein it doth not exercise itself. So that if either part of
this dilemma be taken, this scheme of liberty, consisting in
self-determining power, is overthrown. If there be an act
of the Will in determining all its own free acts, then one
free act of the Will is determined by another; and so we
have the absurdity of every free act, even the very first, determined by a foregoing free act.
But if there be no act or
exercise of the Will in determining its own acts, then no
liberty is exercised in determining them. From whence it
follows, that no liberty consists in the Will's power to determine its own acts: or, which is the
same thing, that there
is no such thing as liberty consisting in a self-determining
power of the Will.
If it should be said, That although it be true, if the soul
determines its own volitions, it must be active in so doing,
and the determination itself must be an act; yet there is
no need of supposing this act to be prior to the volition
determined; but the will or soul determines the act of
the Will in willing; it determines its own volition, in the
very act of volition; it directs and limits the act of the
will, causing it to be so and not otherwise, in exerting the
act, without any preceding act to exert that. If any should
say after this manner, they must mean one of these three
things: either, (1.) That the determining act, though it be
before the act determined in the order of nature, yet is not
before it in order of time. Or, (2.) That the determining
act is not before the act determined, either in the order of
time or nature, nor is truly distinct from it; but that the
soul's determining the act of volition is the same thing with
its exerting the act of volition: the mind's exerting such
a particular act, is its causing and determining the act.
Or, (3.) that volition has no cause, and is no effect; but
comes into existence, with such a particular determination,
without any ground or reason of its existence and determination.-- I shall consider these
distinctly.
(1.) If all that is meant, be, that the determining act is
not before the act determined in order of time, it will not
help the case at all, though it should be allowed. If it be
before the determined act in the order of nature, being the
cause or ground of its existence, this as much proves it to
be distinct from, and independent on it, as if it were before
in the order of time. As the cause of the particular motion of a natural body in a certain
direction, may have no
distance as to time, yet cannot be the same with the motion effected by it, but must be as
distinct from it, as any
other cause, that is before its effect in the order of time: as
the architect is distinct from the house which he builds,
or the father distinct from the son which he begets. And
if the act of the Will determining be distinct from the act
determined, and before it in the order of nature, then we
can go back from one to another, till we come to the first
in the series, which has no act of the will before it in the
order of nature, determining it; and consequently is an act
not determined by the will, and so not a free act, in this
notion of freedom. And this being the act which determines all the rest, none of them
are free acts. As when
there is a chain of many links, the first of which only is
taken hold of and drawn by hand; all the rest may follow
and be moved at the same instant, without any distance of
time; but yet the motion of one link is before that of
another in the order of nature; the last is moved by the
next, and that by the next, and so till we come to the first;
which not being moved by any other, but by something
distinct from the whole chain, this as much proves that no
part is moved by any self-moving power in the chain, as if
the motion of one link followed that of another in the order
of time.
(2.) If any should say, that the determining act is not
before the determined act, either in the order of time, or of
nature, nor is distinct from it; but that the exertion of the that
act is the determination of the act; that for the soul to
exert a particular volition, is for it to cause and determine
that act of volition: I would on this observe, that the thing
in question seems to be forgotten, or kept out of sight in a
darkness and unintelligibleness of speech; unless such an
objector would mean to contradict himself.-- The very act
of volition itself is doubtless a determination of mind; i. e.
it is the mind's drawing up a conclusion, or coming to a
choice between two or more things proposed to it. But
determining among external objects of choice, is not the
same with determining the act of choice itself, among
various possible acts of choice.-- The question is, What influences, directs, or determines
the mind or Will to come
to such a conclusion or choice as it does? Or what is the
cause, ground, or reason, why it concludes thus, and not
otherwise? Now it must be answered, according to the
Arminian notion of freedom, that the Will influences,
orders, and determines itself thus to act. And if it does, I
say, it must be by some antecedent act. To say, it is
caused, influenced, and determined by something, and yet
not determined by any thing antecedent, either in order of
time or nature, is a contradiction. For that is what is
meant by a thing's being prior in the order of nature, that
it is someway the cause or reason of the thing, with respect
to which it is said to be prior.
If the particular act or exertion of will, which comes into
existence, be any thing properly determined at all, then it
has some cause of existing, and of existing in such a particular determinate manner, and not
another; some cause,
whose influence decides the matter: which cause is distinct
from the effect, and prior to it. But to say, that the Will
or mind orders, influences, and determines itself to exert an
act by the very exertion itself, is to make the exertion both
cause and effect; or the exerting such an act, to be a cause
of the exertion of such an act. For the question is, What
is the cause and reason of the soul's exerting such an act?
To which the answer is, The soul exerts such an act, and
that is the cause of it. And so, by this, the exertion must
be distinct from, and in the order of nature prior to, itself.
(3.) If the meaning be, that the soul's exertion of such
a particular act of will, is a thing that comes to pass of
itself, without any cause; and that there is absolutely no
reason of the soul being determined to exert such a volition, and make such a choice,
rather than another; I say,
if this be the meaning of Arminians, when they contend so
earnestly for the Will determining its own acts, and for
liberty of Will consisting in self-determining power; they
do nothing but confound themselves and others with words
without a meaning. In the question, What determines the
will? and in their answer, that the Will determines itself;
and in all the dispute, it seems to be taken for granted,
that something determines the Will; and the controversy
on this head is not, whether its determination has any
cause or foundation at all; but where the foundation of it
is, whether in the will itself, or somewhere else. But if
the thing intended be what is above mentioned, then nothing at all determines the Will;
volition having absolutely no cause or foundation of its existence, either within or without.--
There is a great noise made about self--determining power, as the source of
all free acts of the Will:
but when the matter comes to be explained, the meaning
is, that no power at all is the source of these acts, neither
self-determining power, nor any other, but they arise from
nothing; no cause, no power, no influence, being at all
concerned in the matter.
However, this very thing, even that the free acts of the
Will are events which come to pass without a cause, is certainly implied in the Arminian
notion of liberty of Will;
though it be very inconsistent with many other things in
their scheme, and repugnant to some things implied in
their notion of liberty. Their opinion implies, that the
particular determination of volition is without any cause;
because they hold the free acts of the will to be contingent
events; and contingence is essential to freedom in their
notion of it. But certainly, those things which have a
prior ground and reason of their particular existence, a
cause which antecedently determines them to be, and determines them to be just as they
are, do not happen contingently. If something foregoing, by a casual influence
and connexion, determines and fixes precisely their coming
to pass, and the manner of it, then it does not remain a
contingent thing whether they shall come to pass or no.
And because it is a question in many respects very important in this controversy, Whether
the free acts of the
Will are events which come to pass without a cause; I shall
be particular in examining this point in the two following
sections.
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