Free Will

Free Will

Philosophers and Neuroscientists in Conversation

Sinnott-Armstrong, Walter; Maoz, Uri

Oxford University Press Inc

04/2022

376

Dura

Inglês

9780197572153

15 a 20 dias

526

Descrição não disponível.
Preface

I. Questions from Neuroscientists for Philosophers
1. What is an intention? - Gideon Yaffe
2. What is a will? - Pamela Hieronymi
3. When is an action voluntary? - Pamela Hieronymi
4. What is freedom? - Walter Sinnott-Armstrong
5. What is free will? - Timothy O'Connor
6. Can there be free will in a determined universe? - Timothy O'Connor
7. Does free will come in degrees? - Jonathan Hall & Tillmann Vierkant
8. How can we determine whether or not we have free will? - Alfred R. Mele
9. What kind of neuroscientific evidence, if any, could determine whether anyone has free will? - Adina L. Roskies
10. What kind of behavioral experiments, if any could determine whether anyone has free will? - Tim Bayne
11. Can a robot with artificial intelligence have free will? - Jonathan Hall & Tillmann Vierkant
12. Do conscious decisions cause physical actions? - Ned Block
13. How is consciousness related to freedom of action or will? - Tim Bayne
14. How is responsibility related to free will, control, and action? - Gideon Yaffe
15. What are reasons? - Walter Sinnott-Armstrong

II. Questions from Philosophers for Neuroscientists
16. What are the main stages in the neural processes that produce actions? - Patrick Haggard & Elisabeth Pares-Pujolras
17. Does the will correspond to any clearly delineated brain area or activity? - Gabriel Kreiman
18. How are the neural processes for deciding when to move similar and different from those for deciding what or how to move? - Antonio Ivano Triggiani & Mark Hallett
19. How are arbitrary and deliberate decisions similar and different? - Jye Bold, Liad Mudrik, & Uri Maoz
20. How do higher-level brain areas exert control over lower-level brain areas? - Mark Hallett
21. What are intentional actions? - Elisabeth Pares-Pujolras & Patrick Haggard
22. What evidence is there that intentions are represented in the brain? - John-Dylan Haynes
23. What is known about the neural correlates of specific beliefs and desires that inform human choices? - Amber Hopkins & Uri Maoz
24. How can we determine whether or not an agent is conscious of a bit of information relevant to an action? - Liad Mudrik & Aaron Schurger
25. Which neural mechanisms could enable conscious control of action? - Jake Gavenas, Mark Hallett, & Uri Maoz
26. How does the absence of a consensus about the neural basis of consciousness and volition affect theorizing about conscious volition? - Amber Hopkins, Liad Mudrik, & Uri Maoz
27. How can we determine the precise timing of brain events related to action? - Mark Hallett & Aaron Schurger
28. How can we determine the precise timing of mental events related to action? - Sae Jin Lee, Sook Mun (Alice) Wong, Uri Maoz, & Mark Hallett
29. Are any neural processes truly random (or stochastic)? - Hans Liljenstroem
30. How can computational models help us understand free will? - Gabriel Kreiman, Hans Liljenstroem, Aaron Schurger, & Uri Maoz

Brain Maps - Amber Hopkins and Natalie Nichols
Glossary - Claire Simmons and Amber Hopkins
Annotated Bibliography - Deniz Ar?tuerk and Amber Hopkins
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