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    Usa "free will" in una frase

    free will frasi di esempio

    free will


    1. John, there is no free will


    2. He is sovereign, even through the free will of men


    3. He gives such details and makes such choices that you have to wonder whether there is any free will at all


    4. the nagging road at the ragged edge of free will,


    5. I would have said 'No, I would have loved to lie with you if you did it of your own free will, but now that you are ordered to, no


    6. Luray probably enjoyed it more because Alan hadn't been ordered to do it this time, he had initiated this of his own free will


    7. This is the exercising of free will,


    8. right of the individual to express his or her free will has not always


    9. We will detect their presence, and any copy that is made, just as the fourth order condensate detector discovered the copies of information being made when free will was in operation


    10. I was with her by choice, by my own free will

    11. Dr said that if it does not arrive of its own free will by the end of the week, he will have to take her into hospital and intervene


    12. of her own free will, unless Himla had changed the dose? If he had, his mouth and vocal cords would have become paralyzed by the Instinct when he tried to sell it to her


    13. ‘What about free will?’ Mannus said


    14. Short answer is that free will creates the possibility for evil, but you deserve some more details, you’re a good egg


    15. It’s called free will


    16. Free Will & Fate


    17. The greatest gift that our Creator has granted us in life is arguably, the gift of free will


    18. By exercising our free will, we can just be who we want to be


    19. Staunch believers of fate have a hard time reconciling with this gift of free will, which implies the future is yet to be determined


    20. All of us have been bestowed the gift of free will i

    21. Through the gift of free will, many of such civilizations have risen to a high level but fallen towards the very end


    22. is the beauty of free will!


    23. Do we opt for actions based on lower or higher emotions? This is where the divine gift of free will comes into play


    24. characters with a free spirit and free will to change things


    25. I am aware of the existence of other people who have a similar likeness to me that confirms my own existence‖ (Freely adapted from Rene Descartes) The troubling assumption with most (nihilistic) existential thinkers is the idea that the universe is fundamentally evil; without purpose or meaning and that alienated Man must overcome the evil dynamics of Nature through his or her own (determined) efforts or by exercising Free Will that ironically lends force to conscious expression


    26. A thought about palimony: Whenever a woman, of her (own) free will, chooses to enter into a relationship of convenience with a man, a celebrity let‘s say, and that relationship subsequently sours, for whatever reason(s), (as is so often the case, the man in question has grown tired of the woman), and the women seeks compensatory emoluments for ―services‖ rendered or alleged physical abuse or


    27. That Free Will may be properly rebuked or applauded by Conscience is a testimony to God‘s Divine Guidance!


    28. The results of such choices are independent of ―preceding‖ designs, that is to say, each of us has it within ourselves to influence our own spiritual destiny through God‘s gift of Free Will


    29. That God exists in Eternity (or outside the limits of time and space) is consistent with His knowledge of ―future‖ events that are uniform with the ―past‖ and ―present‖ and the doctrine of Free Will that operates concurrently along (the) space/time continuum


    30. Free Will, however, does not preclude God from influencing (or changing) the course of events, however, for His (own) intended

    31. Free Will is that which separates Man from Beast


    32. The faculty of Free Will allows Humankind to make (reasonable) decisions


    33. Although the choices that we oftentimes make are the inevitable outcome of Free Will, such decisions, however, are not…inevitable! Unlike the Beast, that lacks a moral directory, Humankind enjoys a variety of moral templates derived from an eternal source


    34. Neither are these models necessarily intended to encourage ―appropriate‖ conduct that should otherwise be left to Free Will to decide but reflect upon, rather, what is expected from a ―right thinking‖ individual who is morally evolving


    35. And what is love without the free will to choose love?


    36. The (critical) assumption of inevitable consequences as they relate to voluntary designs, however essential to the formation of sound moral character, does not predispose a Will to Good; that is to say, Free Will does not dictate the


    37. Grace does not invalidate Free Will that, however expressed in accordance with God‘s (purposeful) designs, allows every individual to charter his or her own chosen course; that is to say, to decide whether to (freely) accept or reject what God expects from each of us or has to offer us if we willingly accept it with an open heart


    38. The problem lies in reconciling the manner an individual is said to behave rather than react (a subtle, yet very important distinction) to pre-conditioning designs exclusive of free will


    39. In other words, to consider them material, however quasi/spiritual ―beings‖ possessing Free Will


    40. Whether or not our ―decided‖ actions are informed by ―non-causal‖ factors (Free Will) or guided by the Determinate Laws of Nature (circumstantial or accidental events) or whether such actions represent a combination of both, Behaviorists are likely to agree that the latter argument is (the) more plausible of the two

    41. Human ―motives‖ are therefore held as determinant or conclusive responses to antecedent events independent of Free Will; that is to say, infer a mindset pre-conditioned by prior events governing present decisions rather than governed by independent designs capable of responding rationally to unexpected events


    42. seemingly render Free Will problematical once (the) events informing ―rational‖ behavior have been properly considered


    43. Free Will is not absolute in any worldly manner because it is oftentimes influenced by internal conditions that remain vague and uncertain; that is to say, lacking absolute (consensual) authority; subject to an individual‘s moral, intellectual and material orientation that (nevertheless) seeks to follow God‘s purposeful intentions


    44. This in no manner implies an nullification of Free Will that (inevitably) continues operating within the (singular) guidelines defining one‘s existence however guided by its fundamental designs


    45. The consequences of Free Will extend beyond the Present


    46. These (human) restrictions, however, do not preclude the exercising of Free Will (or an individual‘s inherent capacity to make informed or independent decisions) that remain (the) necessary requirements for self-sufficiency and determination; whose absence would reduce Humankind to scripted characters in a play lacking moral and intellectual substance (or spiritual awareness) that otherwise elevates an individual beyond ceremonial customs to aspired spiritual ideals


    47. It may be correctly argued that Existentialism, understood as a liberating force extolling the efforts of an individual seeking to liberate that individual from the hostile influence(s) of ―indifferent‖ universal covenants that otherwise restrict that individual‘s freedom in the manner they seek to condition or influence his or her manner of thinking or behaving is not entirely incompatible with certain religious teachings concerned with the question of human ―existence‖ and how it relates to our (―own‖) moral authority or free will


    48. a few years earlier raising constitutional questions whether or not an individual could be kept in a psychiatric institution against his or her own free will even if that individual had undergone a thorough psychiatric evaluation and had been evaluated incompetent to make decisions on his or her own behalf


    49. “Tell me it is your own free will


    50. Worse, there was a good chance that, like the police who had stopped me earlier that day, they weren’t even acting of their own free will but were innocents who were manipulated by the vampire who wanted me dead














































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