Free will and determinism

Cards (14)

  • name four types of determinism
    • Biological
    • Environmental
    • psychic
    • Scientific determinism
  • Name two approaches to free will
    • Humanistic approach
    • Moral responsibility
  • Outline biological determinism and provide an example. What approach uses it?
    Biological approach uses biological determinism- behaviour is impacted by biology
    • Genetic influences on behaviour- determine destiny
    • Genes influence brain structure and neurotransmitters
    • Eg- SERT gene creates lower levels of neurotransmitter seratonin, linking to development of OCD
  • Define free will
    Individuals have the power to make choices about their behaviour
  • Define determinism
    Behaviour is controlled by external or internal factors acting upon the individual
  • Define hard determinism
    All behaviour can be predicted and there is no free will
  • Define soft determinism
    A version of determinism that allows some element of free will
  • Outline environmental determinism and provide an example. What approach uses it?
    Behavioural approach uses environmental determinism- behaviour is controlled by external influences
    • All behaviour caused by previous experience
    • Learned through stimulus and response links- through processes of classical and operant conditioning
    • Controlled by parents, society, etc
    • Eg- phobic response learned through CC and unlearned through SD by pairing the phobic stimulus with other different (neutral) stimuli
  • Outline psychic determinism and provide an example. What approach uses it?
    Psychodynamic approach uses psychic determinism- Freud’s psychoanalytic theory of personality- behaviour is controlled by unconscious fears/desires
    • Behaviour is a mix of innate drive and early experience
    • Behaviour driven by libido and focuses on erogenous zones
    • Fixations on each zone and methods of obtaining satisfaction dominate personality
  • Outline scientific determinism and provide an example. What approach uses it?
    Scientific approach- causal explanations for behaviour
    • Scientific research based on belief that all events have a cause
    • Independent variable is manipulated to examine the causal effect on the dependent variable
    • Eg- Harlows monkeys- IV- wire or cloth covered mother with milk, DV- attachment formed
  • What approach uses free will? Outline the key aspects of it
    Humanistic approach
    • Self determinism is a necessary part of human behaviour
    • Healthy self development and self actualisation is not available without it
    • Rogers (1959) - as long as people remain controlled by other people or things, they can’t change or take responsibility for their behaviour
  • Outline moral responsibility as an example of free will
    • Individual is in charge of their own actions
    • Children and mentally ill people don’t have this responsibility
    • Humans accountable for actions regardless of innate factors or early experience
  • Evaluate determinism
    • ☹️Biological- doubtful that 100% genetic determinism will be found- identical twin studies, 80% intelligence concordance rate, 40% depression concordance rate
    • ☹️Environmental- can’t be sole determining factor in behaviour, there is some genetic input. Also behaviour is too complex to be determined through stimuli and responses
    • ☹️Scientific- accepted that no such things as total determinism (chaos theory- small changes can result in big and complex effects, causal rels are probabilistic rather than determinist- events only increase likelihood of an outcome)
    • 😊Determinism may be undesirable as it provides excuse for behaviour- criminals who try avoid harsh sentences may argue they inherited aggressive tendencies eg - Steven Mobeley, claimed he was "born to kill"
  • Evaluation of free will?
    • ☹️ An illusion- skinner argues choices influenced by previous reinforcement experiences
    • ☹️Cultural relativism- self determinism may be individualistic- collectivism focuses on the group as more important
    • ☹️ Research to challenge free will (Benjamin libet et al) recorded activity in motor areas in brain before person had conscious awareness of the decision to move their finger