Of course to say “I don't understand”, looking up at the ceiling with eyebrows raised in the neo-Wittgensteinian manner (whereupon the other person is supposed to have lost the argument because he is supposed to have said something meaningless), is too dangerous a matter. The only time I saw Bertrand Russell read a paper was when in the discussion one brash young philosopher tried this ploy, whereupon Russell said “I'm not responsible for your intellectual deficiencies, young man”.
J. J. C. SmartDespite the best efforts of both author and reader, there may be occasions when one is prompted to say “I don't understand” when confronted by a certain philosophical argument. I hope that such occasions have been few and far between as far as the present volume is concerned, but when presenting such a broad range of viewpoints, especially in summarized form, it is unlikely that the reader will find every argument either equally compelling or comprehensible. For that reason, I have listed below a number of books representing a cross-section of the free will literature, which will allow the reader to hear the arguments for (and against) libertarianism, compatibilism and several other positions, straight from the horses' mouths. They each go into far greater detail than has been possible with this introductory volume and should go a long way towards answering the cry “I don't understand”.
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