Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Introduction
-
1 The Neuroscience of Movement -
2 Consciousness of Action as an Embodied Consciousness -
3 Intentions, Actions, and the Self -
4 Free Choice and the Human Brain -
5 Consciousness, Intentionality, and Causality -
6 Where’s the Action? Epiphenomenalism and the Problem of Free Will -
7 Empirical Constraints on the Problem of Free Will -
8 Toward a Dynamic Theory of Intentions -
9 Phenomenology and the Feeling of Doing: Wegner on the Conscious Will -
10 Free Will: Theories, Analysis, and Data -
11 Of Windmills and Straw Men: Folk Assumptions of Mind and Action -
12 Does Consciousness Cause Misbehavior? -
13 Free Will as a Social Institution -
14 Truth and/or Consequences: Neuroscience and Criminal Responsibility -
15 Bypassing Conscious Control: Media Violence, Unconscious Imitation, and Freedom of Speech -
16 Neurosociety Ahead? Debating Free Will in the Media - Contributors
- Index
(p.360) (p.361) Contributors
(p.360) (p.361) Contributors
- Source:
- Does Consciousness Cause Behavior?
- Publisher:
- The MIT Press
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- Title Pages
- Introduction
-
1 The Neuroscience of Movement -
2 Consciousness of Action as an Embodied Consciousness -
3 Intentions, Actions, and the Self -
4 Free Choice and the Human Brain -
5 Consciousness, Intentionality, and Causality -
6 Where’s the Action? Epiphenomenalism and the Problem of Free Will -
7 Empirical Constraints on the Problem of Free Will -
8 Toward a Dynamic Theory of Intentions -
9 Phenomenology and the Feeling of Doing: Wegner on the Conscious Will -
10 Free Will: Theories, Analysis, and Data -
11 Of Windmills and Straw Men: Folk Assumptions of Mind and Action -
12 Does Consciousness Cause Misbehavior? -
13 Free Will as a Social Institution -
14 Truth and/or Consequences: Neuroscience and Criminal Responsibility -
15 Bypassing Conscious Control: Media Violence, Unconscious Imitation, and Freedom of Speech -
16 Neurosociety Ahead? Debating Free Will in the Media - Contributors
- Index