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Who's in Charge?: Free Will and the Science of the Brain (Ecco) (Hardback)
$23.64 - Save $4.35 (15%) - RRP $27.99 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for Who's in Charge?"The "father of cognitive neuroscience" makes a powerful and provocative argument against today's common wisdom that our lives are wholly determined by physical processes we cannot control"--
Full description- Publisher: Ecco Press
- Published: 15 November 2011
- Format: Hardback 260 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Physiological & Neuro-psychology, Biopsychology | Neurosciences | Ethics & Moral Philosophy
- ISBN 13: 9780061906107 ISBN 10: 0061906107
- Sales rank: 54,637
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Full description for Who's in Charge?
The father of cognitive neuroscience and author of "Human" offers a provocative argument against the common belief that our lives are wholly determined by physical processes and we are therefore not responsible for our actions A powerful orthodoxy in the study of the brain has taken hold in recent years: Since physical laws govern the physical world and our own brains are part of that world, physical laws therefore govern our behavior and even our conscious selves. Free will is meaningless, goes the mantra; we live in a "determined" world. Not so, argues the renowned neuroscientist Michael S. Gazzaniga in this thoughtful, provocative book based on his Gifford Lectures----one of the foremost lecture series in the world dealing with religion, science, and philosophy. "Who's in Charge?" proposes that the mind, which is somehow generated by the physical processes of the brain, "constrains" the brain just as cars are constrained by the traffic they create. Writing with what Steven Pinker has called "his trademark wit and lack of pretension," Gazzaniga shows how determinism immeasurably weakens our views of human responsibility; it allows a murderer to argue, in effect, "It wasn't me who did it----it was my brain." Gazzaniga convincingly argues that even given the latest insights into the physical mechanisms of the mind, there is an undeniable human reality: "We are responsible agents who should be held accountable for our actions, because responsibility is found in how people interact, not in brains." An extraordinary book that ranges across neuroscience, psychology, ethics, and the law with a light touch but profound implications, "Who's in Charge?" is a lasting contribution from one of the leading thinkers of our time.

