Search Books
Nietzsche and Morality Hegel: Lectures on the Hist…

Did My Neurons Make Me Do It?: Philosophical and Neurobiological Perspectives on Moral Responsibility and Free Will

Author Nancey Murphy, Warren S. Brown
Publisher Oxford University Press
Category Philosophy
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
33.96 39.95 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $19.29

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN0199568235
ISBN-139780199568239
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,526,212
CategoryPhilosophy
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

If humans are purely physical, and if it is the brain that does the work formerly assigned to the mind or soul, then how can it fail to be the case that all of our thoughts and actions are determined by the laws of neurobiology? If this is the case, then free will, moral responsibility, and, indeed, reason itself would appear to be in jeopardy. Nancey Murphy and Warren S. Brown here defend a non-reductive version of physicalism whereby humans are (sometimes) the authors of their own thoughts and actions.

Did My Neurons Make Me Do It? brings together insights from both philosophy and the cognitive neurosciences to defeat neurobiological reductionism. One resource is a "post-Cartesian" account of mind as essentially embodied and constituted by action-feedback-evaluation-action loops in the environment, and "scaffolded" by cultural resources. Another is a non-mysterious account of downward (mental) causation explained in terms of a complex, higher-order system exercising constraints on lower-level causal processes. These resources are intrinsically related: the embeddedness of brain events in action-feedback loops is the key to their mentality, and those broader systems have causal effects on the brain itself.

With these resources Murphy and Brown take on two problems in philosophy of mind: a response to the charges that physicalists cannot account for the meaningfulness of language nor the causal efficacy of the mental qua mental. Solutions to these problems are a prerequisite to addressing the central problem of the book: how can biological organisms be free and morally responsible? The authors argue that the free-will problem is badly framed if it is put in terms of neurobiological determinism; the real issue is neurobiological reductionism. If it is indeed possible to make sense of the notion of downward causation, then the relevant question is whether humans exert downward causation over some of their own parts and processes. If all organisms do this to some extent, what needs to be added to this animalian flexibility to constitute free and responsible action? The keys are sophisticated language and hierarchically ordered cognitive processes allowing (mature) humans to evaluate their own actions, motives, goals, and rational and moral principles.
Synergetics: Explorations in the Geometry of Thinking
View
Maps of the Mind: Charts and Concepts of the Mind and …
View
Synergetics 2: Explorations in the Geometry of Thinking
View
The New Organon and Related Writings (Library of Liber…
View
Philosophical Writings: Descartes
View
Introduction to Logic: Study Guide
View
Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals
View
Hesiod: Theogony
View
Good and Evil
View