Man's free choice--liberum arbitrium--falls easily into place as a predetermined contingency.
Saint Thomas was required to illustrate the theory of "liberum arbitrium" by choosing a path through these difficulties, where path there was obviously none.
The liberum arbitrium indifferentiæ which is assumed to be the distinctive characteristic of movements proceeding from the will, is accordingly quite inadmissible: for it asserts that effects are possible without causes.
Here used in the absolute sense of liberum arbitrium indifferentiæ.
Accordingly the dispute as to the freedom of the particular action, the liberum arbitrium indifferentiae, really turns on the question whether the will lies in time or not.
Hence there is an end to our “liberum arbitrium; sed restituetur nobis in resurrectione mortuorum, ubi rursum collocabimur in paradisum.
And liberum arbitrium Hath the lond the ferme Under Piers the Plowman, To piken it and to weden it.
Ac liberum arbitrium Letteth hym som tyme, That is lieutenaunt to loken it wel, Bi leve of myselve.
He seriously puts forward the liberum arbitrium indifferentiae (a free and indifferent choice), giving as its foundation the most trivial and frivolous reasons.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "liberum arbitrium" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.