Who's in charge?

free will and the science of the brain

No cover

Gazzaniga, Michael S.: Who's in charge? (2011, Ecco)

English language

Published Jan. 30, 2011 by Ecco.

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (6 reviews)

"The "father of cognitive neuroscience" makes a powerful and provocative argument against today's common wisdom that our lives are wholly determined by physical processes we cannot control"--

3 editions

Review of "Who's in charge?" on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

If everything, including you and me, is made up of material that blindly obeys the inflexible laws of physics, then everything that happens, including what you and I do, is inevitable, and free will is something of an illusion or a joke.

Right?

Or are we just thinking of the question the wrong way?

The free will conundrum takes a turn for the ridiculous when it assumes that free will is something that must take place outside of the material world that everything else resides in. The thought experiment goes something like this: make some arbitrary decision (say, to raise your left hand), then imagine turning back the clock and resetting the universe so that every single fact about it was the same as it was before you made that decision. When you restart the clock, would it be possible for you to decide any differently?

If you try to …

avatar for FeloDeSe

rated it

4 stars
avatar for sethmdoty

rated it

5 stars
avatar for timchi

rated it

3 stars
avatar for mellifera

rated it

1 star

Subjects

  • Brain
  • SCIENCE / General
  • Cognitive neuroscience

Lists