In this paper, I argue that trying is the locus of freedom and moral responsibility. Thus, any plausible view of free and
responsible action must accommodate and account for free tryings. I then consider a version of agent causation whereby the
agent directly causes her tryings. On this view, the agent is afforded direct control over her efforts and there is no need
to posit—as other agent-causal theorists do—an uncaused event. I discuss the potential advantages of this sort of view, and
its challenges.
Keywords freedom - trying - exertion - action - agent causation