extra Credit_review_kim yeonjun 2

 Kurzgesagt

I can't decide, but I can choose.

This video compares the positions of those who insist on non-free will and those who insist on free will. They talk about the existence of human free will, taking into account the physics of elements and particles, and quantum mechanics, which is unknown until everything is accurately determined.

It's related to TED-ED reviews, but we're not npc where we can't choose anything. The beings we call npc are the inhabitants of the game, they move according to a fixed frame, and do nothing outside of that frame. Although we may not be able to resist a fixed fate like Oedipus, like Oedipus. But our free will does not exist, we have the freedom to choose, and it will change fate.
For example, what if Admiral Yi Sun-sin listened to his ancestors and abandoned the remaining 12 ships to join the army? What if General MacArthur continued the war without conducting a mission to land in Incheon? Were many heroes and great men jumping on the seemingly impossible task by giving up their lives because they knew that they would succeed according to their fate? Not at all. They were just humans like us and longed for something, not knowing what kind of fate they would face. Whether everything was decided or decided, the winner or the loser of that fate, they left a strong impression and left a mark on our history. Philosopher Thomas Hobbs said, "Freedom cannot be deduced from the will or desire. Freedom can be found in doing what you want consistently." As long as humans want something and crave something, aren't we free

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