
audiobook
A REVIEW OF EDWARDS’S “INQUIRY INTO THE FREEDOM OF THE WILL.”
INTRODUCTION.
I.
II.
III.
CONCLUSION.
Footnotes
This thoughtful review opens by placing Jonathan Edwards’s classic treatise on free will within the bustling debates of early nineteenth‑century philosophy and theology. The author argues that discussions of the will have been tangled with sectarian doctrines, and insists that a clear, Baconian approach—observing the mind without prejudice—offers a way forward. By treating the will as a facet of human consciousness, the work invites listeners to explore how reason and faith might jointly illuminate moral responsibility.
Structured in three parts, the review first lays out Edwards’s system, then follows its logical consequences, and finally scrutinizes the arguments that deny a self‑determining will. Throughout, the writer balances rigorous psychological analysis with a respectful regard for biblical insight, suggesting that genuine inquiry need not threaten religious conviction. Listeners will hear a measured, scholarly examination that asks whether the tension between determinism and liberty can be resolved through honest, open‑minded study.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (366K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Keith G Richardson
Release date
2011-04-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1805–1881
A philosopher and educator who helped shape the modern American university, he became the first president of the University of Michigan and pushed for a broader, more research-focused education. His ideas about higher learning were influential well beyond his own campus.
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