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.
Examines how neuroscience can inform the concept of free will and associated practices of moral and criminal responsibility.
Walter Glannon is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Calgary. His research interests are primarily in the areas of bioethics and neuroethics, and he has published on free will and moral and criminal responsibility, with a focus on how cognitive and clinical neuroscience has influenced how we conceive of and assess these concepts and associated practices. His publications include Brain, Body and Mind: Neuroethics with a Human Face (2011), Bioethics and the Brain (2007) and Biomedical Ethics (2005). In 2010 he was the recipient of a grant from the John Templeton Foundation for the project 'Diminishing and Enhancing Free Will'. Free Will and the Brain is the product of this project.
'If ever a subject needed multi-author perspectives, it is this
one. Free Will and the Brain fulfils a crucial need by bringing
together the expertise of philosophers, psychiatrists,
neuroscientists and legal experts. It deals with most aspects of
this vast subject, but is particularly strong on brain disorders
that disrupt free will and their implications for legal decisions.
I strongly recommend it!' Peter Clarke, neuroscientist and former
Associate Professor, University of Lausanne
'Recent developments in neuroscience, drawing on findings from
brain-imaging experiments and the like, have prompted exaggerated
and philosophically naïve claims about the 'illusory' character of
free will, and have been met with equally ill-conceived criticisms
from some scientifically uninformed philosophers. This volume
promises to be a valuable corrective to such fruitless debates and
a genuine meeting of minds.' Jonathan Lowe, former Professor of
Philosophy and Director of Postgraduate Studies, Durham
University
'The rapidly accumulating insights into the functions and
mechanisms of the brain have rekindled clinical, legal and
philosophical interest in the concept of 'free will'. Philosopher
Walter Glannon has assembled an expert international team of
scientists, clinicians, philosophers and other scholars who dig
deeply into the questions of if, and how, neuroscience changes our
understanding of free will. Glannon's insightful introduction
provides an overview of breadth and substantive depth. His
contributors provide the latest and best thinking about this very
complex problem.' John Z. Sadler, Daniel W. Foster, M.D. Professor
of Medical Ethics, Southwestern Medical Center, University of Texas
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