With a 5-to-8-horsepower two-stage model, you get a wider clearing path but still retain portability and affordability.
Kane is one of several philosophers and scientists to propose a two-stage model of free will.
The challenge for two-stage models is to admit some indeterminism but not permit it to produce random actions, as determinists fear.
Compton was one of a handful of scientists and philosophers to propose a two-stage model of free will.
James' two-stage model effectively separates chance (undetermined alternative possibilities) from choice (the free action of the individual, on which randomness has no effect).
A two-stage model of free will separates the free stage from the will stage.
In 1884, William James was the first thinker to propose a two-stage model.
Dennett makes his version of a two-stage model very clear, defending it with six reasons.
Kane's theory is an example of a two-stage model of free will.
Phillip Clay's two-stage model of gentrification places artists as prototypical stage one or "marginal" gentrifiers.