
Published online:
31 January 2013
Published in print:
01 December 2011
Online ISBN:
9780191754074
Print ISBN:
9780197264898
Contents
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1. Brain events and mental events interact 1. Brain events and mental events interact
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2. Obstacles to assembling data for a mind-brain theory 2. Obstacles to assembling data for a mind-brain theory
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3. Obstacles to forming a predictive theory from the data 3. Obstacles to forming a predictive theory from the data
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4. What neuroscience can discover 4. What neuroscience can discover
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5. Intentions are probably undetermined 5. Intentions are probably undetermined
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References References
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Chapter
4 Dualism and the determination of action
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Pages
63–83
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Published:December 2011
Cite
SWINBURNE, RICHARD, 'Dualism and the determination of action', in Richard Swinburne (ed.), Free Will and Modern Science, British Academy Original Paperbacks (London , 2011; online edn, British Academy Scholarship Online, 31 Jan. 2013), https://doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264898.003.0005, accessed 18 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This chapter argues that it is most unlikely that neuroscientists will ever be able to predict human actions resulting from difficult moral decisions with any high degree of probable success. That result leaves open the possibility that humans sometimes decide which actions to perform, without their decisions being predetermined by prior causes. The chapter begins with two assumptions, which provide a different framework within which to work out how far human actions are predictable from that of Frank Jackson, and which lead to a different kind of conclusion.
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