04021nam 22006375 450 991087899220332120240806130247.09783662694503(electronic bk.)978366269449710.1007/978-3-662-69450-3(MiAaPQ)EBC31582829(Au-PeEL)EBL31582829(CKB)33729299900041(DE-He213)978-3-662-69450-3(EXLCZ)993372929990004120240806d2024 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierScience and Free Will Neurophilosophical Controversies and What It Means to Be Human /by Stephan Schleim1st ed. 2024.Berlin, Heidelberg :Springer Berlin Heidelberg :Imprint: Springer,2024.1 online resource (223 pages)The Frontiers Collection,2197-6619Print version: Schleim, Stephan Science and Free Will Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin / Heidelberg,c2024 9783662694497 1. Introduction: Humans as natural or cultural beings -- 2. Philosophical preliminaries to free will -- 3. Max Planck's argument -- 4. Determinism and causality -- 5. Today's physicists on free will -- 6. Free will in biology and neuroscience -- 7. Interim conclusion -- 8. Freedom and responsibility in law and morality -- 9. Scientists are also just humans -- 10. All too human neuro-fallacies -- 11. Psychology: What we can positively say about freedom -- Epilogue and acknowledgements -- A. Max Planck's original essay from 1939: On the nature of free will -- B. Suggestions for further thinking and for teaching.Free will is one of the most discussed topics in neuroscience, psychology and philosophy. Many even assume that our view of human nature and our social order are at stake. This book shows that the academic debate is often conducted under misleading assumptions: Practical freedom should not only be explored in quixotic laboratory experiments. Therefore, in the second part of Science and Free Will the problem is related to real decisions in our everyday lives. But first, important basic knowledge from over 2,500 years of our cultural history is conveyed. Learn how already Socrates rejected the idea that humans are only the sum of their physical parts. The book then shows how the dispute over free will in Christianity almost led to a civil war. From the 18th century onwards, scientifically influenced ideas became increasingly important. Biology, physiology and physics have an extensive say before psychology and brain research take over the topic. Science and Free Will explains why the endless debate over determinism is not the core of the problem. Well-known physicists such as Max Planck, Albert Einstein and Anton Zeilinger are discussed. The question is not whether our decisions are causally determined, but rather what causes play a role. What this means for the law, science and how we can still be free is discussed in detail at the end.The Frontiers Collection,2197-6619Philosophy of mindPhysicsAstronomyNeurosciencesPhysicsPhilosophyPhilosophy of MindPhysics and AstronomyNeurosciencePhilosophical Foundations of Physics and AstronomyPhilosophy of mind.Physics.Astronomy.Neurosciences.PhysicsPhilosophy.Philosophy of Mind.Physics and Astronomy.Neuroscience.Philosophical Foundations of Physics and Astronomy.128.2Schleim Stephan1424691MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQ9910878992203321Science and Free Will4205187UNINA