Advances in Theories, Methods and Philosophy
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Paper Number
1674
Paper Type
Completed
Description
If agency is the core capacity to act and autonomy is the capacity to act in an uncoerced manner, then free will is the condition of possibility in which agency and autonomy may occur. Greater philosophical clarity concerning free will - and determinism - can benefit a critical view of digital determinism, represented by the move toward dystopian futures. This paper presents some of the philosophical debate concerning the compatibility of free will and determinism. We survey the approaches in IS to free will and determinism and examine the impact of the philosophical approaches. We conclude that in IS, most scholars are compatibilists, believing in both free will and in determinism. We find that a critical view of digital determinism can help more positivist IS scholars better appreciate their own support for free will. We highlight the importance of an understanding of free will to the practice of ethics.
Recommended Citation
Kreps, David and Rowe, Frantz, "Free Will in Philosophy and in IS research: where do we stand and where do we want to be?" (2021). ICIS 2021 Proceedings. 5.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2021/adv_in_theories/adv_in_theories/5
Free Will in Philosophy and in IS research: where do we stand and where do we want to be?
If agency is the core capacity to act and autonomy is the capacity to act in an uncoerced manner, then free will is the condition of possibility in which agency and autonomy may occur. Greater philosophical clarity concerning free will - and determinism - can benefit a critical view of digital determinism, represented by the move toward dystopian futures. This paper presents some of the philosophical debate concerning the compatibility of free will and determinism. We survey the approaches in IS to free will and determinism and examine the impact of the philosophical approaches. We conclude that in IS, most scholars are compatibilists, believing in both free will and in determinism. We find that a critical view of digital determinism can help more positivist IS scholars better appreciate their own support for free will. We highlight the importance of an understanding of free will to the practice of ethics.
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