Susan Blackmore PHD - EXAMINING FREE WILL episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 15, 2022 · 1H 7M

Susan Blackmore PHD - EXAMINING FREE WILL

from Chasing Consciousness · host Freddy Drabble

Is our subjective experience of Free Will, supported by the experimental evidence? If not, how do we take moral responsibility for our actions? Why do meditators, who’re used to watching their thoughts arise and pass without identifying with them, find this data easier to integrate? In this episode, we have the tough job of evaluating the experimental evidence for the existence of Free Will. The debate has raged for centuries in Philosophy, but now with advances in neuroscience and psychology experiments, we have some actual physical evidence to examine, and its implications to reflect on. We’re going to discuss how most of those who accept this evidence have chosen to carry on as if it they still have Free Will, which sounds contradictory. Do the implications for personal moral responsibility require us to do that? We’re also going to get into meditation and Zen, as our guest today and another famous advocate of the illusion of free will, Sam Harris, are long term practitioners. It seems those who use some kind of mindfulness meditation, and hence are used to watching the way thoughts arise and pass without identifying with them, are less troubled by the idea that they may not have free will. What does all this mean for the reality of a ‘self’? So who better to explain this mind boggling question than, our first returning guest, psychologist, author and visiting Professor at Plymouth University, Susan Blackmore. Best known for her books The Meme Machine, Consciousness: An Introduction, and Seeing Myself, Sue’s work spans across hundreds of publications in over 20 different languages, making huge contributions in the fields of psychology, memetics, religion, philosophy of mind, supernatural experience, and many other areas. What we discuss (full show notes on the website) 00:00 Intro 04:24 Previous Interview with Susan - Episode #1 on The Hard Problem of Consciousness 08:30 Experimental evidence refuting Free Will 14:30 Daniel Wegner - Thought suppression experiments 19:30 Who is making the decision if not our consciousness? 29:40 Wegner, ‘I let the decision make itself’ = Zen: Let the universe or practice do it 40:00 Meditation: frustration, Sam Harris and letting go of free will 50:00 Buddha’s ‘dependent origination’ and science’s causation References: Susan Blackmore - ‘Living without Free Will’ Benjamin Libet - Testing readiness potential against the time of choice Daniel Wegner - Thought suppression experiments Susan Blackmore - ‘Conversations on Consciousness’ Susan Blackmore - ‘Zen and the art of consciousness’

Is our subjective experience of Free Will, supported by the experimental evidence? If not, how do we take moral responsibility for our actions? Why do meditators, who’re used to watching their thoughts arise and pass without identifying with them, find this data easier to integrate? In this episode, we have the tough job of evaluating the experimental evidence for the existence of Free Will. The debate has raged for centuries in Philosophy, but now with advances in neuroscience and psychology experiments, we have some actual physical evidence to examine, and its implications to reflect on. We’re going to discuss how most of those who accept this evidence have chosen to carry on as if it they still have Free Will, which sounds contradictory. Do the implications for personal moral responsibility require us to do that? We’re also going to get into meditation and Zen, as our guest today and another famous advocate of the illusion of free will, Sam Harris, are long term practitioners. It seems those who use some kind of mindfulness meditation, and hence are used to watching the way thoughts arise and pass without identifying with them, are less troubled by the idea that they may not have free will. What does all this mean for the reality of a ‘self’? So who better to explain this mind boggling question than, our first returning guest, psychologist, author and visiting Professor at Plymouth University, Susan Blackmore. Best known for her books The Meme Machine, Consciousness: An Introduction, and Seeing Myself, Sue’s work spans across hundreds of publications in over 20 different languages, making huge contributions in the fields of psychology, memetics, religion, philosophy of mind, supernatural experience, and many other areas. What we discuss (full show notes on the website) 00:00 Intro 04:24 Previous Interview with Susan - Episode #1 on The Hard Problem of Consciousness 08:30 Experimental evidence refuting Free Will 14:30 Daniel Wegner - Thought suppression experiments 19:30 Who is making the decision if not our consciousness? 29:40 Wegner, ‘I let the decision make itself’ = Zen: Let the universe or practice do it 40:00 Meditation: frustration, Sam Harris and letting go of free will 50:00 Buddha’s ‘dependent origination’ and science’s causation References: Susan Blackmore - ‘Living without Free Will’ Benjamin Libet - Testing readiness potential against the time of choice Daniel Wegner - Thought suppression experiments Susan Blackmore - ‘Conversations on Consciousness’ Susan Blackmore - ‘Zen and the art of consciousness’

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Consciousness with Naskar Abhijit Naskar Official Podcast of Celebrated Neuroscientist, Bestselling Author and Peace Advocate Abhijit Naskar Heart Centered Revolution | Kundalini Yoga + Conscious Living Jen & Ramtin Pourvasei Welcome to the Heart Centered Revolution podcast! We are Jen and Ramtin Pourvasei, and we aim to uplift and inspire you by sharing wisdom and techniques from Kudnalini Yoga and other consciousness practices. Listen to learn tools to feel connected to your true self, and to understand what it means to be a spiritual being having a human experience. Each episode ends with a short pranayam, or breathing meditation. Learn more at www.heartcenteredrevolution.com. ChatGTM: Revolutionizing Restaurant Tech & Go-To-Market Strategies Michael Beck Welcome to ChatGTM by Ink Tank GTM, where tech innovation, strategic clarity, and caffeine-fueled chaos collide.Hosted by the dynamic duo of Michael Beck and Chad Horn, this isn’t just a podcast. It’s a pressure cooker for big ideas and practical genius. Michael is a human brainstorm in sneakers, equal parts espresso and electric current. Chad is the philosophical anchor, the strategist who makes sure the rocket ship remembers gravity.They don’t just talk shop. They crack open the engine room of business, startups, restaurants, retail, all of it and tinker until it hums. From AI-powered ordering systems to the operational alchemy that turns good ideas into great companies, this is where high-octane vision meets real-world execution.Guests? Imagine if Elon Musk and Anthony Bourdain had a dinner party. Bold thinkers, mad geniuses, and pragmatic disruptors drop in to turn conventional wisdom inside out with a wink and a war story.If you're a founder chasing scale, a builder breaking The Alchemical Cosmos Podcast Candice Tune in for profound cosmic talk with The Alchemical Cosmos Podcast. From astrology and the esoteric to consciousness and alchemy, we'll explore a range of topics all focused on self-growth and awareness with a dose of accountability.

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This episode was published on October 15, 2022.

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Is our subjective experience of Free Will, supported by the experimental evidence? If not, how do we take moral responsibility for our actions? Why do meditators, who’re used to watching their thoughts arise and pass without identifying with them,...

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