Recent Libet-style experiments are of limited relevance to the debate about free action and free will, and should be understood as investigations of arbitrary actions or guesses. In Libet-style experiments, the concept of 'free action' is commonly taken to refer to a 'self-initiated voluntary act', where the self prompts an action without being prompted. However, this idea is based on the problematic assumption that the conscious self needs to be free from every constraint in order to be actually free. We maintain that a fundamental condition for free action is the presence of reasons to act responsibly. By analyzing a recent neuroscientific experiment, we indicate how its results could be interpreted as indicating how free action operation...
Scientific experiments which try to examine free will are faced with various critical arguments — bo...
It is intuitive that free action depends on consciousness in some way, since behavior that is uncons...
(2) In a famous series of experiments Libet has proved, many believe, that the way for human action ...
Contains fulltext : 149399.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Recent Libet-...
Free will is the capacity to select and execute one really possible action alternative. In recent ye...
In this paper, I analyse how neuroscientists come to the conclusion that the brain 'decides' what we...
<p>The neurological experiments conducted by Benjamin Libet (1985) and Grey Walter (1993, in Dennett...
Debates about the concept of Free Will date back to ancient times. About 40 years ago Benjamin Libet...
Skepticism about free will is increasingly often associated with the results of some empirical tests...
In this poster I discuss the experiments of Libet and colleagues on conscious decisions, but my conc...
In this paper, I will take into account and criticize two of the most celebrated neuroscientific exp...
What are the types of action at issue in the free will and moral responsibility debate? Are the neur...
In the extensive, recent debates on free will, the pioneering experiments by Benjamin Libet continue...
Self-control, Routine, and Free Will. Remarks on Benjamin Libet’s Experiments - This paper aims to s...
We, humans, live under the impression that agents’ conscious intentions to act are at the origin of ...
Scientific experiments which try to examine free will are faced with various critical arguments — bo...
It is intuitive that free action depends on consciousness in some way, since behavior that is uncons...
(2) In a famous series of experiments Libet has proved, many believe, that the way for human action ...
Contains fulltext : 149399.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Recent Libet-...
Free will is the capacity to select and execute one really possible action alternative. In recent ye...
In this paper, I analyse how neuroscientists come to the conclusion that the brain 'decides' what we...
<p>The neurological experiments conducted by Benjamin Libet (1985) and Grey Walter (1993, in Dennett...
Debates about the concept of Free Will date back to ancient times. About 40 years ago Benjamin Libet...
Skepticism about free will is increasingly often associated with the results of some empirical tests...
In this poster I discuss the experiments of Libet and colleagues on conscious decisions, but my conc...
In this paper, I will take into account and criticize two of the most celebrated neuroscientific exp...
What are the types of action at issue in the free will and moral responsibility debate? Are the neur...
In the extensive, recent debates on free will, the pioneering experiments by Benjamin Libet continue...
Self-control, Routine, and Free Will. Remarks on Benjamin Libet’s Experiments - This paper aims to s...
We, humans, live under the impression that agents’ conscious intentions to act are at the origin of ...
Scientific experiments which try to examine free will are faced with various critical arguments — bo...
It is intuitive that free action depends on consciousness in some way, since behavior that is uncons...
(2) In a famous series of experiments Libet has proved, many believe, that the way for human action ...