On the Alleged Illusion of Conscious Will
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BibTeX
@MISC{Duijn_onthe,
author = {Marc Van Duijn and Sacha Bem},
title = {On the Alleged Illusion of Conscious Will},
year = {}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
The belief that conscious will is merely ‘‘an illusion created by the brain’ ’ appears to be gaining in popularity among cognitive neuroscientists. Its main adherents usually refer to the classic, but controversial ‘Libet-experiments’, as the empirical evidence that vindicates this illusion-claim. However, based on recent work that provides other interpretations of the Libet-experiments, we argue that the illusion-claim is not only empirically invalid, but also theoretically incoherent, as it is rooted in a category mistake; namely, the presupposition that neuronal activity causes conscious will. We show that the illusion-claim is based on the behaviorist ‘input-output ’ paradigm, and discuss the notions of ‘self-organization ’ and ‘self-steering ’ to provide an alternative perspective on the causal efficacy of conscious will. In the final sections, a tentative theoretical picture is sketched of conscious will as an instance of self-steered self-organization. We conclude that the subjective experience of conscious will is not a misguided one, but rather that the mechanisms supporting conscious will are considerably more complex than mainstream cognitive neuroscience currently acknowledges. Keywords: Conscious Will; Benjamin Libet; Self-Organization 1.







