1st Edition

The Experimental Approach to Free Will Freedom in the Laboratory

By Katherin A Rogers Copyright 2022
256 Pages
by Routledge

256 Pages
by Routledge

256 Pages
by Routledge

Recently, psychologists and neurobiologists have conducted experiments taken to show that human beings do not have free will. Many, including a number of philosophers, assume that, even if science has not decided the free will question yet, it is just a matter of time. In The Experimental Approach to Free Will , Katherin A . Rogers accomplishes several tasks. First, canvasing the... Read more

Introduction

1. Reasons For and Against Free Will

2. A Paradigmatic Free Choice

3. The Libet Experiments

4. Conscious Will is an Illusion

5. Situationism

6. Ethical Issues in Experiments with Human Subjects

7. The Future Study of Human Freedom: Setting the Stage and Ethical Issues

8. The Future Study of Human Freedom: Practical Problems

Biography

Katherin A. Rogers is Professor in the Philosophy Department at the University of Delaware. Her publications include Perfect Being Theology (2000), Anselm on Freedom (2008), Freedom and Self-Creation: Anselmian Libertarianism (2015), and numerous articles in the philosophy of religion, medieval philosophy, and ethics, including such topics as freedom and foreknowledge, time and eternity, the moral status of abortion, and the justification of punishment.