PLOTINO, ARISTÓTELES Y EL ORIGEN DEL LIBRE ALBEDRÍO

Authors

  • JULIANA ACOSTA LÓPEZ DE MESA Southern Illinois University

Keywords:

Free will, Frede, Aristotle, Plotinus, Stoicism

Abstract

This article has as its main purpose to criticize the mainstream scholar tradition on the free will, according to which, there is no notion of free will in ancient Greek Philosophy. With this aim, I will make a direct critique to Michael Frede’s interpretation on the matter, who claims that this concept originates from the Stoic tradition, in some measure, because they are the first to develop an intellectual concept of the free will that, in his point of view, provides the best account on this issue. Moreover, I will show that Aristotle does have a notion of free will, in my opinion, even much more broad and effective than the merely intellectual one, for it explains, among other things, the possibility of choosing evil. Finally, in order to evaluate the limitations of the intellectualist free will, I shall use the analysis of the problem provided by Plotinus.

Published

2012-12-20

How to Cite

ACOSTA LÓPEZ DE MESA, J. (2012). PLOTINO, ARISTÓTELES Y EL ORIGEN DEL LIBRE ALBEDRÍO. Disertaciones, 3(1), 32–50. Retrieved from https://ojs.uniquindio.edu.co/ojs/index.php/Disertaciones/article/view/114