Journal of Consciousness Studies
Contents and Selected Abstracts

Volume 6, Issue 8-9
August-September 1999

The Volitional Brain: Towards a Neuroscience of Free Will

Edited by Benjamin Libet, Anthony Freeman and Keith Sutherland

This issue is available to subscribers as a special supplement ($12/£7.50)
but is included free with the full back issues set.
It can also be purchased separately as a hardcase book ($32.95/£19.95)

  Sample Full Text  Anthony Freeman, Decisive Action: Personal responsibility all the way down

Contents

  • Editors’ Introduction
  • Neuroscience

  • David H. Ingvar, On Volition: a neurophysiologically oriented essayabstract
  • Sean A. Spence and Chris D. Frith, Towards a Functional Anatomy of Volition  abstract
  • Wolfram Schultz, The Primate Basal Ganglia and the Voluntary Control of Behaviour   abstract
  • Benjamin Libet, Do We Have Free Will?  abstract
  • Gilberto Gomes, Volition and the Readiness Potential  abstract
  • Psychology and Psychiatry

  • Jonathan Bricklin, A Variety of Religious Experience: William James and the non-reality of free will  abstract
  • Guy Claxton, Whodunnit? Unpicking the ‘seems’ of free will abstract
  • Jeffrey M. Schwartz, A Role for Volition and Attention in the Generation of New Brain Circuitry: Towards a neurobiology of mental force  abstract
  • Physics

  • Henry P. Stapp, Attention, Intention and Will in Quantum Physics abstract
  • Ulrich Mohrhoff, The Physics of Interactionism  abstract
  • David L.Wilson, Mind–brain Interaction and Violation of Physical Laws  abstract
  • Philosophy

  • David Hodgson, Hume’s Mistake  abstract
  • E.J. Lowe, Self, Agency and Mental Causation  abstract
  • John McCrone, A Bifold Model of Free Will  abstract
  • Comment

  • Jaron Lanier, And Now a Brief Word from Now: Logical dependencies between vernacular concepts of free will, time and consciousness
  • Whit Blauvelt, Y’s Domain
  • Anthony Freeman, Decisive Action: Personal responsibility all the way down   Full Text
  • Thomas W. Clark, Fear of Mechanism: A compatibilist critique of ‘The Volitional Brain’

  • Selected Abstracts


    Volition and the Readiness Potential

    Gomes G. CPRJ, R. Lopez Quintas 100-605-I, 22460-010 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil ggomes@ax.apc.org.br

    The readiness potential was found to precede voluntary acts by about half a second or more (Kornhuber & Deecke, 1965). Kornhuber (1984) discussed the readiness potential in terms of volition, arguing that it is not the manifestation of an attentional processes. Libet discussed it in relation to consciousness and to free will (Libet et al., 1983a,b; Libet, 1985; 1992; 1993). Libet asked the following questions: Are voluntary acts initiated by a conscious decision to act? Are the physiological facts compat- ible with the belief that free will determines our voluntary acts? What is the role of consciousness in voluntary action? In this paper I will discuss these questions and the answers that Libet gave to them.


    A Variety of Religious Experience. William James and the Non-Reality of Free Will

    Bricklin J. 89 Scribner Avenue, Staten Island, NY 10301, USA brickmar@mindspring.com

    Free will does not exist, nor can it be explained, outside the confines of subjective experience. William James, whose talent for depicting subjective experience was equal to his brother Henry's, desperately wanted to believe in free will. But his introspections did not support it.


    Whodunnit? Unpicking the 'Seems' of Free Will

    99-113 Claxton G. University of Bristol School of Education, 35 Berkeley Square, Bristol BS8 1JA, UK guy.claxton@bristol.ac.uk

    The cornerstone of the dominant folk theory of free will is the presumption that conscious intentions are, at least sometimes, causally related to subsequent 'voluntary' actions. Like all folk theories that have become 'second nature', this model skews perception and cognition to highlight phenomena and interpretations that are consistent with itself, and pathologize or render invisible those that are not. A variety of experimental, neurological and everyday phenomena are reviewed that cumulatively cast doubt on this comforting folk model. An alternative view, more consistent with the evidence, sees intentions and actions as co-arising in complex neural systems that are capable of (fallibly) anticipating the outcomes of their own ongoing processing. Such tentative predictions, when they become conscious, are appropriated by a 'self system' that believes itself to be instigatory, and reframed as 'commands'. This confusion between prediction and control is hypothesized to arise particularly in selves that are identified in terms of a complex proliferation of partially conflicting goal-states. Such a system routinely needs to carry out detailed and time-consuming analyses of the motivational character of situations, thus creating the conditions in which anticipatory neural states surface into consciousness. The experience of 'self control' occurs when the system successfully predicts the dominance of a 'higher', more long-term or a priori less likely goal state, over another that is seen as 'lower', short-term or more likely.


    A Role for Volition and Attention in the Generation of New Brain Circuitry. Toward A Neurobiology of Mental Force

    Schwartz J.M. UCLA Department of Psychiatry, 760 Westwood Plaza, Room 67-468, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1759, USA jmschwar@ucla.edu

    Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a commonly occurring neuropsychiatric condition characterized by bothersome intrusive thoughts and urges that frequently lead to repetitive dysfunctional behaviours such as excessive handwashing. There are well-documented alterations in cerebral function which appear to be closely related to the manifestation of these symptoms. Controlled studies of cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) techniques utilizing the active refocusing of attention away from the intrusive phenomena of OCD and onto adaptive alternative activities have demonstrated both significant improvements in clinical symptoms and systematic changes in the pathological brain circuitry associated with them. Careful investigation of the relationships between the experiential and putative neurophysiological processes involved in these changes can offer useful insights into volitional aspects of cerebral function.


    Attention, Intention, and Will in Quantum Physics.

    Stapp H.P. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA hpstapp@lbl.gov

    How is mind related to matter? This ancient question in philosophy is rapidly becoming a core problem in science, perhaps the most important of all because it probes the essential nature of man himself. The origin of the problem is a conflict between the mechanical conception of human beings that arises from the precepts of classical physical theory and the very different idea that arises from our intuition: the former reduces each of us to an automaton, while the latter allows our thoughts to guide our actions. The dominant contemporary approaches to the problem attempt to resolve this conflict by clinging to the classical concepts, and trying to explain away our misleading intuition. But a detailed argument given here shows why, in a scientific approach to this problem, it is necessary to use the more basic principles of quantum physics, which bring the observer into the dynamics, rather than to accept classical precepts that are profoundly incorrect precisely at the crucial point of the role of human consciousness in the dynamics of human brains. Adherence to the quantum principles yields a dynamical theory of the mind/brain/body system that is in close accord with our intuitive idea of what we are. In particular, the need for a self-observing quantum system to pose certain questions creates a causal opening that allows mind/brain dynamics to have three distinguishable but interlocked causal processes, one micro-local, one stochastic, and the third experiential. Passing to the classical limit in which the critical difference between zero and the finite actual value of Planck's constant is ignored not only eliminates the chemical processes that are absolutely crucial to the functioning of actual brains, it simultaneously blinds the resulting theoretical construct to the physical fine structure wherein the effect of mind on matter lies: the use of this limit in this context is totally unjustified from a physics perspective.


    The Physics of Interactionism

    Mohrhoff U. Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Pondicherry 605 002, India

    Physics has been invoked both to refute and to support psycho-physical interactionism, the view that mind and matter are two mutually irreducible, interacting domains. Thus it has been held against interactionism that it implies violations of the laws of physics, notably the law of energy conservation. I examine the meaning of conservation laws in physics and show that in fact no valid argument against the interactionist theory can be drawn from them. In defence of interactionism it has been argued that mind can act on matter through an apparent loophole in physical determinism, without violating physical laws. I show that this argument is equally fallacious. This leads to the conclusion that the indeterminism of quantum mechanics cannot be the physical correlate of free will; if there is a causally efficacious non-material mind, then the behaviour of matter cannot be fully governed by physical laws. I show that the best (if not the only) way of formulating departures from the 'normal', physically determined behaviour of matter is in terms of modifications of the electromagnetic interactions between particles. I also show that mental states and events are non-spatial, and that departures from the 'normal' behaviour of matter, when caused by mental events, are not amenable to mathematical description.


    Mind-Brain Interaction and Violation of Physical Laws

    Wilson D.L. Department of Biology, University of Miami, PO Box 249118, Coral Gables, FL 33124-0421, USA

    If mind is not a part of the physical universe but is able to influence brain events, then violations of physical laws should occur at points of such mental influence. Using current knowledge of how the nervous system functions, the minimal necessary magnitude of such violations is examined. A variety of influences that could produce action potentials is considered, including the direct opening of sodium channels in membranes, the triggering of release of neurotransmitter at synapses, the opening of postsynaptic, ligand-gated channels, and the control of neuromodulation. It is shown that the magnitude of the disturbance required is significantly greater than allowed for under quantum-mechanical uncertainty. It is concluded that violations of fundamental physical laws, such as energy conservation, would occur were a non-physical mind able to influence brain and behaviour.


    Hume's Mistake

    Hodgson D. Supreme Court of New South Wales, Queens Square, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia raeda@ozemail.com.au

    Hume claimed that anything that happens must either be causally determined or a matter of chance, and that a person is responsible only for choices caused by the person's character; so that if any sense is to made of free will and responsibility, it must be on the basis that they are compatible with determinism. In this paper I argue that Hume's claim depends on a covert assumption that whatever happens to any system in the world must be either the only development of the system which is consistent with causal laws, or else a development which is random. I argue that it is a serious mistake to make such an assumption covertly; and that without this assumption, good sense can be made of a concept of free will and responsibility as being indeterministic, thereby providing a viable alternative to compatibilist views


    Self, Agency and Mental Causation

    Lowe E.J. Department of Philosophy, University of Durham, 50 Old Elvet, Durham, DH1 3HN, UK E.J.Lowe@Durham.ac.uk

    A self or person does not appear to be identifiable with his or her organic body, nor with any part of it, such as the brain; and yet selves seem to be agents, capable of bringing about physical events (such as bodily movements) as causal consequences of certain of their conscious mental states. How is this possible in a universe in which, it appears, every physical event has a sufficient cause which is wholly physical? The answer is that this is possible if a certain kind of naturalistic dualism is true, according to which the conscious mental states of selves, although not identifiable with physical states of their brains, are emergent effects of prior physical causes. Moreover, mental causation on this model promises to explain certain aspects of physical behaviour which may appear arbitrary and coincidental from a purely physical point of view.


    A Bifold Model of Freewill

    McCrone J. 10 Sterry Drive, Thames Ditton, Surrey KT7 0YN, UK J.Mccrone@btinternet.com

    The folk psychology view of the faculty of freewill is that it is innate, unitary, structureless and, of course, free. A bifold approach to the mind, as taken by Vygotsky, Mead, Luria and others, argues that, like all the other higher mental abilities of humans, freewill is in fact largely a socially-constructed and language-enabled habit of thought. There is a neurology for this habit to latch on to -- after all, the 'raw' animal brain is built for acting rather than contemplating. But it is the social superstructure -- the habit of monitoring and even directing our planning behaviour - which creates much of the traditional mystery. Indeed, ironically, it is actually central to the socially-constructed Western 'script' of freewill that we deny the social origins of this ability to take charge of our own brains.


    Do We Have Free Will?

    Libet B. Department of Physiology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143-0444, USA

    I have taken an experimental approach to this question. Freely voluntary acts are preceded by a specific electrical change in the brain (the 'readiness potential', RP) that begins 550 ms before the act. Human subjects became aware of intention to act 350-400 ms after RP starts, but 200 ms. before the motor act. The volitional process is therefore initiated unconsciously. But the conscious function could still control the outcome; it can veto the act. Free will is therefore not excluded. These findings put constraints on views of how free will may operate; it would not initiate a voluntary act but it could control performance of the act. The findings also affect views of guilt and responsibility. But the deeper question still remains: Are freely voluntary acts subject to macro-deterministic laws or can they appear without such constraints, non-determined by natural laws and 'truly free'? I shall present an experimentalist view about these fundamental philosophical opposites.


    The Primate Basal Ganglia and the Voluntary Control of Behaviour

    Schultz W. Institute of Physiology and Program in Neuroscience, University of Fribourg, CH-1700 Fribourg, Switzerland

    This review summarizes recent experiments on neuronal mechanisms underlying goal-directed behaviour. We investigated two basic processes, the internally triggered initiation of movement and the processing of reward information. Single neurons in the striatum (caudate nucleus, putamen and ventral striatum) were activated a few seconds before self-initiated movements in the absence of external triggering stimuli. Similar activations were observed in the closely connected cortical supplementary motor area, suggesting that these activations might evolve through build up in fronto-basal ganglia loops. They may relate to intentional states directed at movements and their outcomes. As a second result, neurons in the striatum were activated in relation to the expectation and detection of rewards. Since rewards constitute important goals of behaviour, these activitations might reflect the evaluation of outcome before the behavioural reaction is executed. Thus neurons in the basal ganglia are involved in individual components of goal-directed behaviour.


    Towards a Functional Anatomy of Volition

    Spence S.A. Neuroscience Section, Imperial College School of Medicine, MRC Cyclotron Unit, Hammersmith Hospital, London W12 0NN, UK sean@hanazono.med.cornell.edu

    Frith, C.D., Wellcome Department of Cognitive Neurology, University College London

    In this paper we examine the functional anatomy of volition, as revealed by modern brain imaging techniques, in conjunction with neuropsychological data derived from human and non-human primates using other methodologies. A number of brain regions contribute to the performance of consciously chosen, or 'willed', actions. Of particular importance is dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), together with those brain regions with which it is connected, via cortico-subcortical and cortico-cortical circuits. That aspect of free will which is concerned with the voluntary selection of one action rather than another critically depends upon the normal functioning of DLPFC and associated brain regions. Disease, or dysfunction, of these circuits may be associated with a variety of disorders of volition: Parkinson's disease, 'utilization' behaviour, 'alien' and 'phantom' limbs, and delusions of 'alien control' (the passivity phenomena of schizophrenia). Brain imaging has allowed us to gain some access to the pathophysiology of these conditions in living patients. At a philosophical level, the distinction between 'intentions to act', and 'intentions in action' may prove particularly helpful when addressing these complex disturbances of human cognition and conscious experience. The exercise and experience of free will depends upon neural mechanisms located in prefrontal cortex and associated brain systems.


    On Volition: A Neurophysiologically Oriented Essay

    Ingvar D.H. Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, University of Lund, University Hospital, S-221 85 Lund, Sweden

    During the last decades, the enigmatic field of volition has been the object of quantitative brain mapping studies. In this essay, emphasis will be given to brain mapping observations during overt or imagined willed acts in conscious normal individuals. The findings suggest that such acts are 'formulated' in the frontal/prefrontal cortex as neuronal programs for future motor, behavioural, verbal, or cognitive acts. During imagined movements or speech, brain mapping reveals important prefrontal activations which contrast to perirolandic activations during overt willed acts. In psychiatric disorders with symptoms of a 'sick will', like in schizophrenia, affective disorders, and organic dementia, reductions of the resting prefrontal activity have been recorded. The relationship between will and prefrontal activity is compatible with the view that frontal/prefrontal (efferent) parts of the cortex are involved in the serial temporal programming of motor behaviour, speech, and cognition. In addition, there are unconscious mechanisms participating in volition. Electrophysiological evidence presented by Libet (1985 et seq.) supports this view.