- Kamran Valizada*
- Nakhchivan State University, Azerbaijan
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19510254
Human
choice represents one of the most fundamental aspects of human existence and
has been a central subject of philosophical inquiry for centuries. The capacity
of individuals to make choices is closely linked to the concepts of freedom,
responsibility, and moral agency. Human beings continuously face situations
that require them to select among alternative possibilities, and these
decisions significantly shape personal identity, social relations, and ethical
accountability. This study examines the philosophical foundations of human
choice by focusing on the relationship between freedom and responsibility.
Drawing upon classical philosophical traditions as well as contemporary debates
in ethics and social theory, the article analyzes how human choices influence
the construction of identity and the development of moral responsibility.
The study
investigates key philosophical questions surrounding free will and determinism,
examining whether human actions are genuinely free or shaped by external
conditions such as social structures, cultural norms, and psychological
factors. Particular attention is given to the perspectives of major
philosophical thinkers including Aristotle, Immanuel Kant, Jean-Paul Sartre,
Charles Taylor, and contemporary moral philosophers. Through a comprehensive
analysis of these perspectives, the article argues that freedom and
responsibility should be understood as complementary dimensions of human agency
rather than opposing concepts.
Furthermore,
the article explores how modern social conditions, including globalization,
technological transformation, and expanding social complexity, have altered the
nature of human decision-making. While modern societies offer individuals
unprecedented opportunities for personal choice, they also generate new forms
of moral responsibility and existential uncertainty. The paper concludes that
human choices are not merely individual acts but socially embedded processes
that contribute to the ongoing construction of identity and ethical
responsibility in contemporary society.

