Jiang says the abducted souls cannot fully blame force, because letting the soldiers take them back counted as agreement and therefore as a yielding of will.
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A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
Yielding
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "So that when will has yielded much or little, it has abetted forces. As these souls did, they could have fled back to their..."
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Key Notes
The classroom's first pass defines absolute will as unwavering fidelity to God and contingent will as the part of the self that yields when threatened with material harm.
Timestamped Evidence
"So that when will has yielded much or little, it has abetted forces. As these souls did, they could have fled back to their..."
"Okay. So yeah, that's it. Okay? The reason why these soldiers were able to arrest you and take you back is you let them..."
"So absolute will is, I will love God no matter what, and contingent will is, I will love God. And then someone tells you,..."
"I don't know. Like, absolute will is no matter what, it's going to happen, but contingent, it's kind of like, because I don't want..."
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