Jorge  González Arocha

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For Hobbes, free will and determinism were not mutually exclusive, but compatible notions. Just as water is unconstrained and yet will always flow to earth, so is man free but constrained by natural law. So long as a man is free to follow his natural inclinations, which ultimately are to survive and multiply, he is free to act. That his inclinations are determined by his nature presents no problem for Hobbes.
Philosophy 100 Essential Thinkers
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