So "volition" is independent of "antecedent conditions"?Volition. All people who believe in will believe that human beings can commence causal moments of their own. Determinists, on the other hand, have to regard the human contribution as a kind of "dumb terminal," meaning a node that actually merely reacts to the previous inputs, and thus adds nothing to the causal chain, merely passing along the consequences of the "antecedent" causes.
The "need" to go to university seems to be the result of "antecedent condition".Oh, that's fairly easy.
The person who believes in will accepts that antecedent conditions set up a range of possible choices for the volitional person; but the volitional person still has choice within the range offered by the various "antecedent conditions."
And that's, in fact, exactly how we all act as if it is. We say, "I found myself in circumstance A, and I decided to B." Or "I needed to go to university, so I chose Harvard...or Yale...or Patterson Technical College." Or "I could have loved Mary or Celine or Maya, but chose Priyanka instead."
And the selection of where you decide to go is based on what you have been told or what you read about those places. Which are also "antecedent conditions".
And there is some sort of ranking of preferences in your mind ... academic excellence, political orientation, party or social scene, stress levels. Those are "antecedent conditions" ... dispositions which you have learned over the course of your life.
The same goes for your loves.
I don't see how your choice is not entirely based on those "conditions".
The interpretation is based on the current state of the agent. If you have been 'indoctrinated' in some way then your interpretation will be based on that 'indoctrination'. Similarly with specific knowledge or lack of knowledge.Evidence is equivocal. It can be interpreted as one thing, or as another. It takes a volitional agent to assess which explanation of the evidence is the most plausible, and to choose to select it over the other possible explanations for the evidence that can possibly exist.
That can be seen in the phrase "If all you have is a hammer, then everything looks like a nail."
And it applies equally to your detective story.