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Conference “Free Will and Consciousness”

19 November 2015 - 20 November 2015

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Free Will and Consciousness November 19th and 20th, 2015, VU University Amsterdam Submission deadline: July 15th, 2015 In recent years, neuroscientific and (social) psychological experimentation have played a significant role in discussions on free will. Several experiments seem to show that (many of) our actions and decisions are caused or influenced by unconscious processes. In general, the focus of the discussion has been on whether these experiments show that conscious processes are never causally efficacious and whether science shows that free…
Free Will and Consciousness November 19th and 20th, 2015, VU University Amsterdam Submission deadline: July 15th, 2015 In recent years, neuroscientific and (social) psychological experimentation have played a significant role in discussions on free will. Several experiments seem to show that (many of) our actions and decisions are caused or influenced by unconscious processes. In general, the focus of the discussion has been on whether these experiments show that conscious processes are never causally efficacious and whether science shows that free will does not exist or is an illusion. An important and underexplored question is how free will and consciousness actually are related. The workshop further elaborates on this relationship in the light of recent studies in neuroscience and psychology. With that, we aim to enrich the discussion and exchange between science and philosophy on the topic of free will. Possible research questions include but are not limited to:  
  1. If consciousness and free will are related, how should we understand this (causal) relationship?
  2. What is the relationship between physical / neural causes and unconscious mental causes of behavior / action and free will? (How) Can we distinguish between both kinds of causes? Is this distinction relevant in relation to free will?
  3. Do we need to be conscious of (all) the causes of and/or reasons for our intentions, decisions, or actions in order for them to be free? Does it matter whether we can become conscious of them or whether they are inaccessible to consciousness?
  4. If we accept that unconsciously caused actions and/or decisions can be free, how should we distinguish between free and unfree action?
  5. What does it mean for actions or decisions to originate from ‘within the agent’ or be ‘up to me’ and how is this related to conscious, mental, and/or bodily processes?
  The workshop is part of the project Science beyond Scientism and organized on behalf of the Abraham Kuyper Center. Confirmed speakers: - Neil Levy (The Oxford Centre for Neuroethics, University of Melbourne) - Adina Roskies (Dartmouth College) Organizing committee: - Lieke Asma - Leon de Bruin - Gerrit Glas - Irma Verlaan We accept contributions from several areas of research, for example philosophy of mind, philosophy of cognitive science, neuroscience, or social psychology. Please send a 500 word abstract to l.j.f.asma@vu.nl by July 15th 2015. The abstract should be suitable for blind review. Questions can be sent to the same email address.

Details

Start:
19 November 2015
End:
20 November 2015
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Venue

Unnamed Venue
Amsterdam, + Google Map

Free Will and Consciousness
November 19th and 20th, 2015, VU University Amsterdam

Submission deadline: July 15th, 2015

In recent years, neuroscientific and (social) psychological experimentation have played a significant role in discussions on free will. Several experiments seem to show that (many of) our actions and decisions are caused or influenced by unconscious processes. In general, the focus of the discussion has been on whether these experiments show that conscious processes are never causally efficacious and whether science shows that free will does not exist or is an illusion.

An important and underexplored question is how free will and consciousness actually are related. The workshop further elaborates on this relationship in the light of recent studies in neuroscience and psychology. With that, we aim to enrich the discussion and exchange between science and philosophy on the topic of free will. Possible research questions include but are not limited to:

 

  1. If consciousness and free will are related, how should we understand this (causal) relationship?
  2. What is the relationship between physical / neural causes and unconscious mental causes of behavior / action and free will? (How) Can we distinguish between both kinds of causes? Is this distinction relevant in relation to free will?
  3. Do we need to be conscious of (all) the causes of and/or reasons for our intentions, decisions, or actions in order for them to be free? Does it matter whether we can become conscious of them or whether they are inaccessible to consciousness?
  4. If we accept that unconsciously caused actions and/or decisions can be free, how should we distinguish between free and unfree action?
  5. What does it mean for actions or decisions to originate from ‘within the agent’ or be ‘up to me’ and how is this related to conscious, mental, and/or bodily processes?

 

The workshop is part of the project Science beyond Scientism and organized on behalf of the Abraham Kuyper Center.
Confirmed speakers:

– Neil Levy (The Oxford Centre for Neuroethics, University of Melbourne)
– Adina Roskies (Dartmouth College)

Organizing committee:

– Lieke Asma
– Leon de Bruin
– Gerrit Glas
– Irma Verlaan

We accept contributions from several areas of research, for example philosophy of mind, philosophy of cognitive science, neuroscience, or social psychology. Please send a 500 word abstract to l.j.f.asma@vu.nl by July 15th 2015. The abstract should be suitable for blind review. Questions can be sent to the same email address.

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