The concept of abilities is relevant for various other concepts and debates. Disagreements in these fields often depend on how abilities are to be understood. In the
free will debate, for example, a central question is whether free will, when understood as the ability to do otherwise, can exist in a world governed by deterministic
laws of nature. Free will is closely related to
autonomy, which concerns the agent's ability to govern oneself. Another issue concerns whether someone has the
moral obligation to perform a certain action and is
responsible for succeeding or failing to do so. This issue depends, among other things, on whether the agent has the ability to perform the action in question and on whether they could have done otherwise. The ability-theory of
concepts and
concept possession defines them in terms of two abilities: the ability to discriminate between positive and negative cases and the ability to draw inferences to related concepts.
Free will The topic of abilities plays an important role in the
free will debate. The free will debate often centers around the question of whether the existence of free will is compatible with
determinism, so-called
compatibilism, or not, so-called
incompatibilism. Free will is frequently defined as the
ability to do otherwise while determinism can be defined as the view that the past together with the laws of nature determine everything happening in the present and the future. It can be ascribed both to individual agents, like human persons, and to collective agents, like nations. Autonomy is often understood in combination with a rational component, e.g. as the agent's ability to appreciate what reasons they have and to follow the strongest reason.
Robert Audi, for example, characterizes autonomy as the self-governing power to bring reasons to bear in directing one's conduct and influencing one's propositional attitudes. Autonomy may also encompass the ability to question one's beliefs and desires and to change them if necessary. Some authors include the condition that decisions involved in self-governing are not determined by forces outside oneself in any way, i.e. that they are a pure expression of one's own will that is not controlled by someone else. As a consequence of this principle, one is not justified to blame an agent for something that was out of their control. According to this principle, for example, a person sitting on the shore has no moral obligation to jump into the water to save a child drowning nearby, and should not be blamed for failing to do so, if they are unable to do so due to
Paraplegia. The problem of moral responsibility is closely related to obligation. One difference is that "obligation" tends to be understood more in a forward-looking sense in contrast to backward-looking responsibility. But these are not the only connotations of these terms. A common view concerning moral responsibility is that the ability to control one's behavior is necessary if one is to be responsible for it. This is often connected to the thesis that alternative courses of action were available to the agent, i.e. that the agent had the ability to do otherwise. But some authors, often from the incompatibilist tradition, contend that what matters for responsibility is to act as one chooses, even if no ability to do otherwise was present. So a person is usually able to attend a meeting 5 minutes from now if they are currently only a few meters away from the planned location but not if they are hundreds of kilometers away. This seems to lead to the counter-intuitive consequence that people who failed to take their flight due to negligence are not morally responsible for their failure because they currently lack the corresponding ability. One way to respond to this type of example is to allow that the person is not to be blamed for their behavior 5 minutes before the meeting but hold instead that they are to be blamed for their earlier behavior that caused them to miss the flight. As such, they play a central role for most forms of
cognition. A person can only entertain a proposition if they possess the concepts involved in this proposition. They tend to defend alternative accounts of concepts, for example, as
mental representations or as
abstract objects. == References ==