(November 8, 2017 at 10:15 am)Harry Nevis Wrote:(November 8, 2017 at 9:44 am)SteveII Wrote: Definition of Libertarian Free Will: A personal explanation of some basic result R brought about intentionally be person P where this bringing about of R is a basic action A will cite the intention I of P that R occurred and the basic power B that P exercised to bring about R. P, I and B provide a personal explanation of R: agent P brought about R be exercising power B in order to realize intention I as an irreducible teleological goal. (Moreland, Blackwell's Companion to Natural Theology. p 298)
Sin, as the deprivation of good, becomes possible the moment someone has a choice. There is good evidence that it is impossible for any single human to choose perfectly. Ergo we have good reasons to conclude that free will entails sin (at least in humans).
Sin doesn't exist outside of religion, so there is no good reason to conclude anything about it.
So what do you call the harmful things that humans do to one another?