Literature DB >> 31362635

Neurocognitive free will.

Thomas T Hills1.   

Abstract

Free will is an apparent paradox because it requires a historical identity to escape its history in a self-guided fashion. Philosophers have itemized design features necessary for this escape, scaling from action to agency and vice versa. These can be organized into a coherent framework that neurocognitive capacities provide and that form a basis for neurocognitive free will. These capacities include (1) adaptive access to unpredictability, (2) tuning of this unpredictability in the service of hierarchical goal structures, (3) goal-directed deliberation via search over internal cognitive representations, and (4) a role for conscious construction of the self in the generation and choice of alternatives. This frames free will as a process of generative self-construction, by which an iterative search process samples from experience in an adaptively exploratory fashion, allowing the agent to explore itself in the construction of alternative futures. This provides an explanation of how effortful conscious control modulates adaptive access to unpredictability and resolves one of free will's key conceptual problems: how randomness is used in the service of the will. The implications provide a contemporary neurocognitive grounding to compatibilist and libertarian positions on free will, and demonstrate how neurocognitive understanding can contribute to this debate by presenting free will as an interaction between our freedom and our will.

Keywords:  cognitive control; compatibilism; consciousness; free will; libertarianism; self

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31362635      PMCID: PMC6710585          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2019.0510

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


  68 in total

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Review 2.  Banishing the homunculus: making working memory work.

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Journal:  Nature       Date:  2006-06-15       Impact factor: 49.962

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Authors:  W E Skaggs; B L McNaughton
Journal:  Science       Date:  1996-03-29       Impact factor: 47.728

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Journal:  Nature       Date:  1999-05-13       Impact factor: 49.962

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Review 8.  Exploration versus exploitation in space, mind, and society.

Authors:  Thomas T Hills; Peter M Todd; David Lazer; A David Redish; Iain D Couzin
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2014-12-03       Impact factor: 20.229

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Authors:  Anne Collins; Etienne Koechlin
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2012-03-27       Impact factor: 8.029

10.  Broadband criticality of human brain network synchronization.

Authors:  Manfred G Kitzbichler; Marie L Smith; Søren R Christensen; Ed Bullmore
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2009-03-20       Impact factor: 4.475

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  2 in total

Review 1.  From exploration to exploitation: a shifting mental mode in late life development.

Authors:  R Nathan Spreng; Gary R Turner
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2021-09-27       Impact factor: 20.229

2.  Randomness and nondeterminism: from genes to free will with implications for psychiatry.

Authors:  Ridha Joober; Sherif Karama
Journal:  J Psychiatry Neurosci       Date:  2021-08-20       Impact factor: 6.186

  2 in total

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