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Subject: Psychology  Book Title: Are We Free?
Are We Free?
Psychology and Free Will
Baer, John (Editor), Professor of Educational Psychology, Rider University
Kaufman, James C. (Editor), Assistant Professor of Psychology, California State University
Baumeister, Roy F. (Editor), Eppes Eminent Professor of Psychology, Florida State University
Print publication date: 2008
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: May 2008
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-518963-6
doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195189636.001.0001
 
Abstract: Do people have free will, or is universal belief an illusion? If free will is more than an illusion, what kind of free will do people have? How can free will influence behavior? Can free will be studied, verified, and understood scientifically? These are a few of the questions this book attempts to answer. People generally act as though they believe in their own free will: they don't feel like automatons, and they don't treat one another as they might treat robots. While acknowledging many constraints and influences on behavior, people nonetheless act as if they (and their neighbors) are largely in control of many if not most of the decisions they make. Belief in free will also underpins the sense that people are responsible for their actions. Psychological explanations of behavior rarely mention free will as a factor, however. Can psychological science find room for free will? How do leading psychologists conceptualize free will, and what role do they believe free will plays in shaping behavior? This book looks both at recent experimental and theoretical work directly related to free will and at the ways leading psychologists from all branches of psychology deal with the philosophical problems long associated with the question of free will, such as the relationship between determinism and free will and the importance of consciousness in free will. It also includes commentaries by leading philosophers on what psychologists can contribute to long-running philosophical struggles with this most distinctly human belief.

Keywords: consciousness, determinism, volition, unconscious, automaticity, intentionality, self-control, automatic processes, controlled processes, self-determination
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Psychology and Free Will
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2. How Can Psychology Contribute to the Free Will Debate?
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3. Determined and Free
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4. Self-Theories: The Construction of Free Will
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5. Free Will, Consciousness, and Cultural Animals
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6. Reconstrual of “Free Will” From the Agentic Perspective of Social Cognitive Theory
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7. Free Will Is Un-natural
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8. The Automaticity Juggernaut—or, Are We Automatons After All?
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9. The Hazards of Claiming to Have Solved the Hard Problem of Free Will
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10. Free Will and the Control of Action
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11. Self Is Magic
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12. Some Observations on the Psychology of Thinking About Free Will
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13. Whose Will? How Free?
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14. Free Will as a Proportion
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15. Willing Creation: The Yin and Yang of the Creative Life
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16. Free Will Requires Determinism
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17. The Fear of Determinism
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18. Psychology and Free Will: A Commentary
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Index
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doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195189636.001.0001
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