This paper extends the Recursive Continuity Framework by developing a substrate-independent ontological account of free will, telos, and agency. Against both deterministic reduction and conceptions of free will as an unconstrained metaphysical exception, the paper argues that free will is best understood as a higher-order expression of telic resolution within recursively continuous systems. On this view, agency is neither an illusion produced by passive causal sequence nor an inexplicable power standing outside constitutive conditions, but a structured form of participation in the determination of continuity under constraint. Within this framework, telos is not restricted to conscious intention or explicit purpose, but refers more fundamentally to the intrinsic directional character through which recursively continuous systems resolve, persist, and organize under constitutive constraints. Free will is accordingly reframed not as freedom from determination, but as a scalar mode of participation within it. Agency varies by degree according to the extent to which a system can internally mediate its own constraint-conditioned resolution, such that what is recognized as free will in conscious beings becomes intelligible as a more developed form of recursive and self-mediating participation. The paper further argues that responsibility and volitional action are best understood in relation to this scalar ontology of agency. On this basis, the traditional opposition between determinism and libertarian freedom is shown to rest on inadequate ontological categories. Free will is instead presented as the higher-order expression of telic resolution arising where recursive continuity becomes sufficiently integrated, participatory, and capable of shaping its own state-transitions from within.
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Joseph Nollau (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69e07dfe2f7e8953b7cbf06f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19582143
Joseph Nollau
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