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Hi,
I wanted to remind you about tomorrow (Friday) night's lecture in
Science Building 1, room 107 at 7:30 pm. The abstract is posted below.
We've moved the discussion board to another site and it's linked on
SII's website ( http://www.scienceintegration.org ) so if we run out
of
time during the Q&A session tomorrow night, it can continue on
the
discussion board. Or if there's something else you want to bring up,
please use this forum.
Thanks,
Angela
**********************
Neuroscience, free will, and responsibility - Dr. Joshua Fost
Abstract:
The notion that we are free to think and act as we please has long
been
an assumption of common sense and of philosophy. While there is no
doubt that we FEEL free, are we really, or are we instead "merely"
complex automata governed only by the physical and biochemical
machinery of our brains? The more neuroscience uncovers about the
relationship between brain and mind, the more we seem forced to
conclude that indeed, the mind is what the brain does, and lacks any
sort of independence from the laws of physics. In that sense, our
will
is like the weather: complicated and unpredictable, but not free at
all. In this discussion, we'll explore the natural underpinnings of
what is sometimes called "the free will illusion" and discuss
what
these ideas mean for everyday notions of self, responsibility, and
ethics.
About the speaker:
Dr. Joshua Fost holds a Ph.D. in neuroscience and psychology from
Princeton University. His work focuses on the implications of brain
research and the naturalistic worldview.
Angela Lowman |