Free Will & Determinism

    Cards (11)

    • Free Will
      - human beings' actions and behaviour stem from their autonomy (the ability to make decisions for themselves)

      - external factors can influence our behaviour but we are still able to reject if we wish
    • Determinism
      - human actions and behaviour are the result of external factors rather than the individual's will

      - this makes behaviour somewhat fixed and predictable
    • Hard Determinism
      - also referred to as 'fatalism'

      - all human behaviour has a cause (internal or external factors) and are somewhat identifiable

      - therefore free will is an illusion
    • Soft Determinism
      - a compromise position between free will and hard determinism

      - behaviour may be predictable/determined to an extent but there is still personal choice from a limited range of possibilities

      - there is ultimately a causal explanation, but we may not have access to it so it's ultimately irrelevant

      - the question is 'How much is determined?'

      - different scientific approaches disagree about how much is determined
    • Biological Determinism
      - behaviour is cause by biological influences (hormonal, genetic and evolutionary) that are outside of out control
    • Environmental Determinism
      - behaviour is the result of influences in our environment

      - human actions are conditioned and 'choice' is simply the sum of of reinforcement contingencies
    • Psychic Determinism
      - a psychodynamic concept

      - human behaviour is caused by unconscious psychodynamic conflicts (repressed trauma, unresolved psychosexual stages etc.)
    • Practical Value: Strength
      - free will has practical value

      - thinking we exercise free will has mental health benefits

      - (Robert et al, 2000) found teenagers with a fatalistic perspective were more likely to develop depression

      - even if we do not have free will believe we do may have a positive effect on our mind and behaviour
    • Research Evidence: Limitation
      - brain scan evidence supports determinism but not free will

      - (Libet et al, 1983) instructed participants to flick their wrist while he measured brain activity (readiness potential)

      - participants had to say when they felt the conscious desire to move

      - scans showed unconscious brain activity occurred around ½ a second before the participant felt they had decided to move

      - meaning even our most basic experiences of free will are actually determined in our brain before we are aware of them
    • Research Evidence: Counterpoint
      - just because the action came before the conscious awareness of the decision to act doesn't mean there was no decision to act - it just took time to reach the consciousness

      - our conscious awareness of a the decision is simple a read-out of our unconscious decision making
    • The Law: Limitation
      - the hard determinist stance is not consistent with our legal system

      - offenders are considered to have free will and are held responsible for their actions

      - this diverges from the deterministic stance that individual choice is not the cause of behaviour

      - suggests that in the real world determinist arguments do not work
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