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Ability

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Abilities are powers that let a person do different things. These can be simple things, like walking, or special things, like doing a double backflip. What makes abilities special is that they depend on what the person wants to do. If you try to do something and you have the ability, you can usually do it.

There are different ideas about what abilities really mean. One common idea says that if you have an ability, you would do the action if you tried. For example, Michael Phelps, the famous swimmer, can swim 200 meters in under 2 minutes because he would do it if he tried. But this idea has problems too. Sometimes people can do something but might not want to try because they really don’t like it.

Abilities can also be general or specific. General abilities are things you can always do, no matter where you are. For example, a skilled piano player can always play the piano if they want to. But if there is no piano around, they can’t play it then—that’s a specific ability. Abilities matter in many areas of life. They are linked to ideas like free will, which is the ability to choose what to do. They also matter for understanding responsibility and how we think about the world.

Definition and semantic field

Abilities are powers that help us do different things. Some abilities, like walking or speaking, are common for most people. Other abilities, like doing a double backflip or solving hard math problems, are special and only a few people can do them.

All abilities are powers, but not all powers are abilities. For example, salt can dissolve in water, but this is not an ability because it does not involve a person doing something on purpose. Abilities are special because they involve actions we do with purpose and intention. This makes them intelligent powers — we decide to use them.

Theories of ability

Different ideas about what makes up abilities have been suggested. The conditional analysis is the most common way to think about abilities. It says that you have an ability if you would do something if you really wanted to or tried to. For example, Michael Phelps can swim 200 meters really fast because he would do it if he tried. Most people cannot do this because they would fail if they tried.

Another way to think about abilities is called the modal approach. This looks at what is possible for someone to do. It says you have an ability if there is a way the world could be where you do that action, even if you don’t actually do it. However, this can get tricky because sometimes things are possible but you still can’t do them, like opening a safe without knowing the code.

Types

Abilities are powers that help us do different things. Some abilities work no matter where we are or what is happening. For example, an expert piano player can usually play the piano well anywhere. But sometimes, we need special conditions to use an ability. This is called a specific ability. If the piano player is tied up, or there is no piano, they can't play — even though they have the ability.

We also talk about effective and transparent abilities. An effective ability means we can do something, even if it happens by luck. A transparent ability is when we really know how to do something the right way. For example, a young student might say the first ten digits of Pi by guessing, but they don't really know the correct order.

Relation to other concepts

The idea of abilities connects to many other important ideas. For example, in debates about free will, a big question is whether we can really choose to do things differently. Free will is linked to autonomy, which means the ability to govern oneself.

Abilities also relate to moral responsibility. If someone can do something, they might have a moral obligation to do it, and they can be held responsible for their choices.

Abilities help us understand concepts, too. Some thinkers say that knowing a concept, like "wombat," means having two abilities: the ability to recognize wombats and the ability to connect that idea to other related ideas, such as knowing that wombats are animals. This helps explain how we think and understand the world.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Ability, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.