Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/10784
Title: PHILOSOPHICAL IMPLICATIONS OF LIBET AND WEGNER ON FREE WILL
Authors: Fosu-blankson, Ferdinard
Keywords: Free Will
Cause
Determinism
Conscious Will
Issue Date: Apr-2021
Publisher: University of Cape Coast
Abstract: The conventional notion of free will does not possess formidable counter arguments to modern neurobiological investigations, proving the implausibility of free will. The pool of evidence gathered by cognitive neuroscientists makes strong justifications to truncate the conception of free will. The research of Benjamin Libet and Daniel Wegner explicates the physical and cognitive limitations that make free will untenable. Their position purports that we are neurobiologically determined. However, their empirical assessment of free will misguides their conclusion. Free will as a conceptual problem requires an assessment beyond the empirical domain. Despite the solid claims from neurobiological determinism, it ignores the metaphysical entailment in action. Hence, it gives an unsatisfactory account for human action. To replace neurobiological determinism, this study proposes neurobiological freedom.
Description: ii, ill:108
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/10784
Appears in Collections:Department of Classics & Philosophy

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