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Someone, Somewhere Is Always Up To Something |
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Free Will By Rush Is Their Greatest Song |
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Constantly Operating In A Crisis Mode Will Cause You To Short Circuit |
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Free Will |
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Freedom An Unalienable Right |
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Free Will |
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Nukes Could Go Off By Accident, Error Or Design |
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Just How Close Is Man To Using WMD's To Annihilate Himself? |
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Doomsday Clock By Topoor @ Deviant Art Could Not Find Page To give Appropriate attribution Great Piece Though |
PERHAPS THE GREATEST ONLINE RESOURCE IS THE STANFORD UNIVERSITY ENCYCLOPEDIA OF PHILOSOPHY. THIS ARCHIVE OF MANS CRITICAL THINKING OF HIMSELF AND THE WORLD HE INHABITS AND OF THE CONCEPT OF GOD SPANS ALL CONTINENTS, CULTURES, RACES AND RELIGIONS. PERHAPS THE MOST COMPELLING OF MODERN MANS POST COPERNICAN ABILITIES IS THAT OF, FREE WILL OR THE ABILITY TO MAKE CHOICES WITHOUT THE CONSTRAINTS OF A PREDETERMINED COURSE OF ACTION BEING MADE FOR HIM BY SUPERSTITIONS OR RELIGIOUS BELIEF SYSTEMS.
YOU CAN READ MORE ABOUT FREE WILL HERE @ STANFORD'S PLATO AND HERE @ WIKIPEDIA.
I'LL LEAVE YOU WITH THE RUSH SONG "FREEWILL" WHICH I REGARD AS RUSH'S GREATEST SONG.
Freewill is the second track on
progressive rock band
Rush's 1980 album
Permanent Waves. It is written by
Geddy Lee and
Alex Lifeson with lyrics by
Neil Peart. The song's lyrics deal with the subject of
free will,
emphasizing that free will is not a gift but rather a choice;
explaining that Man can attempt to evade the fact that he must choose,
but that evasion is itself a choice.
[1]
Geddy Lee has stated that the end part of "Freewill" is at the highest part of his vocal range.
[2] An early version of this song along with "
The Spirit of Radio" were played on the Permanent Waves Warm-Up Tour in late 1979.
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