Free Will and the Brain: Neuroscientific, Philosophical, and Legal Perspectives
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Reprint, 3/1/2018
EAN 9781108449304, ISBN10: 1108449301
Paperback, 308 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm
Language: English
Neuroscientific evidence has educated us in the ways in which the brain mediates our thought and behavior and, therefore, forced us to critically examine how we conceive of free will. This volume, featuring contributions from an international and interdisciplinary group of distinguished researchers and scholars, explores how our increasing knowledge of the brain can elucidate the concept of the will and whether or to what extent it is free. It also examines how brain science can inform our normative judgments of moral and criminal responsibility for our actions. Some chapters point out the different respects in which mental disorders can compromise the will and others show how different forms of neuromodulation can reveal the neural underpinning of the mental capacities associated with the will and can restore or enhance them when they are impaired.
Part I. Introduction
1. Free will in light of neuroscience Walter Glannon
Part II. Conceptual Issues
2. Is free will an observer-based concept rather than a brain-based one? A critical neuroepistemological account Georg Northoff
3. Evolution, dissolution and the neuroscience of the will Grant Gillett
4. The experience of free will and the experience of agency
an error-prone, reconstructive process Matthis Synofzik, Gottfried Vosgerau and Axel Lindner
Part III. Mental Capacities and Disorders of the Will
5. Being free by losing control
what obsessive-compulsive disorder can tell us about free will Sanneke de Haan, Erik Rietveld and Damiaan Denys
6. Psychopathy and free will from a philosophical and cognitive neuroscience perspective Farah Focquaert, Andrea L. Glenn and Adrian Raine
7. How mental disorders can compromise the will Gerben Meynen
8. Are addicted individuals responsible for their behavior? Wayne Hall and Adrian Carter
9. Assessment and modification of free will via scientific techniques
two challenges Nicole A. Vincent
Part IV. Neural Circuitry and Modification of the Will
10. Implications of functional neurosurgery and deep-brain stimulation for free will and decision-making Nir Lipsman and Andres M. Lozano
11. Reducing, restoring, or enhancing autonomy with neuromodulation techniques Maartje Schermer
Part V. Legal Implications of Neuroscience
12. Neurobiology collides with moral and criminal responsibility
the result is double vision Steven E. Hyman
13. Neuroscience, free will and criminal responsibility Stephen J. Morse.