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And arguments for incompatibilism often employ a principle like the following: if it is not up to a given agent whether a certain event occurs, and it is not up to that agent whether if that event occurs then the agent performs a certain action, then it is not up to the agent whether she performs that action.
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We also need to give users the motivation they need to want to perform that action.
Having an ability to perform some action stands in some relationship to actually performing that action.
For example, typing a thumbs up emoji would have the avatar perform that action, while a fist would have the avatar throwing a punch.
For each user interaction, the session reconstruction tool also extracts the type of the action, and all the required information to perform that action.
A more delicate question is whether actually performing an action is a sufficient condition for having the ability to perform that action.
Morris recognizes, apparently, that the primary sense in which an agent is free in performing an action requires that the agent either (a) could have refrained from performing that action or, at least, (b) could have refrained from causing his decision to perform that action.
That is, it must be up to the agent whether to perform that action or possess the trait it cannot be compelled externally.
The question revolves around the sense of 'could' involved here: in precisely what sense of 'could' is it that if you to ought to perform an action you could perform that action?
On a more specific version of the view, an individual has a reason to do an action only if he has a desire to perform that action or to achieve some end which requires doing that action.
We do not want, first of all, for a theory of ability to take actually performing an action to be a necessary condition for having the ability to perform that action.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com