The doctrine that all actions are determined by the current state and immutable laws of the universe, with no possibility of choice
(philosophy) a philosophical theory holding that all events are inevitable consequences of antecedent sufficient causes; often understood as denying the possibility of free will
The view that all human actions are determined or necessitated by impersonal prior causes (that is, causes other than the agent)
the theory that everything that occurs happens in accordance with sonic regular pattern tar law
The teaching that every event in the universe is caused and controlled by natural law
The teaching that every event in the universe is caused and controlled by natural law; that there is no free will in humans and that all events are merely the result of natural and physical laws
A belief that all processes are predetermined by definite causes and natural laws and can therefore be predicted Biological determinism and mechanical determinism are two variations of this premise Indeterminism is the reverse of thisa belief that events are governed not by laws but by pure chance
Genus: Theory of causality Differentia: Everything in the universe is predetermined directly by previous events Comment: This is often used as a method of denying free will, but that denial is a dropping of context Link: Article
A behavior describing repeatability in observed parameters The order of a set of events does not vary from run to run
Belief that, since each momentary state of the world entails all of its future states, it must be possible (in principle) to offer a causal explanation for everything that happens When applied to human behavior, determinism is sometimes supposed to be incompatible with the freedom required for moral responsibility The most extreme variety of determinism in this context is fatalism Recommended Reading: Ted Honderich, Mind and Brain: A Theory of Determinism (Clarendon, 1990) {at Amazon com} and Consequences of Determinism (Clarendon, 1990) {at Amazon com}; and Daniel C Dennett, Elbow Room (MIT, 1984) {at Amazon com} Also see articles on determinism, its historical, logical, and scientific varieties, and destiny in OCP, Norman Swartz, Michael Huemer, BGHT, P S Greenspan, ISM, David L Thompson, ColE, Donna Summerfield, noesis, and MacE
Generally, the doctrine that every fact in the universe is guided entirely by law (in Christian theology, by God's law) All facts in the universe are dependent upon and conditioned by their causes "Soft" determinism removes the ultimate cause from the immediate cause of a fact; "hard" determinism describes every fact as directly caused by law
The doctrine that the will is not free, but is inevitably and invincibly determined by motives
Denies freedom of the will in causality According to this fateful school of thought, all effects are necessary, and not contingent It is a cosmological application of Deism
view that all human action is a result of previous causes Contrast with freewill
{i} doctrine which states that there is a reason for everything and all is predestined
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Her olayın başka olayların gerekli ve kaçınılmaz bir sonucu olduğunu ileri süren öğreti, gerekircilik, determinizm