Answer/explanation:
The expression "<em>free</em> will" means the freedom to choose <em>your own choices </em>and/or what goes on around you.
For example, if something happens to you "against your free will" then it happens <em>without </em>your control or your say in the situation.
Hope this helps! :D
The answer is G. Have a good day
An implied argument is an argument which leaves us to draw the supposedly obvious conclusion for ourselves. Where an assumption on which the argument depends is not stated it is not readily available for scrutiny and therefore the fact that it is questionable or false can easily escape our attention. Similarly where a conclusion remains unstated the questionable connection between it and the reasons given for it remains out of view and may thus escape our critical appraisal. The problem with implied arguments therefore is that they involve a sort of mental sleight of hand that can fool us.
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