Ever make a really stupid decision? Or said something embarrassing?
Or did something you were later ashamed of? I guess maybe we all have. Maybe
you even committed a crime.
Not to worry. It’s not your fault, according to a growing
body of philosophers, psychologists, and neuroscientists. These learned people
tell us that humans do not make conscious intentions, decisions, or choices.
Those are all made by our robotic unconscious mind, which makes its intentions,
decisions, or choices known after the fact to conscious mind.
I wrote an earlier blog on this subject (http://brainblogger.com/2010/10/25/free-will-is-not-an-illusion/),
but want to explore it some more because the growing acceptance of
blamelessness is having serious consequences in our schools, courts, and in politics.
This idea has actually been around for a long time,
apparently 2000 years according to Roskies (2010). But the modern father of the
robot view was Ben Libet, who in the 1980s, performed some simple experiments
that he and most others interpreted to support the robot view. Basically, he
showed that brain signs of a decision to press a button appeared a fraction of
a second before the experimental subject said a decision had been made―thus
unconscious mind made the decision and later made conscious mind aware of it.
Actually, there are lots of flaws in this experiment and its
interpretation, which were pointed out by several scholars in the succeeding
years. In 2010, I summarized these objections and added some of my own in a
review of the subject. My criticisms focus on three main points: 1) timing of
when a free-will event occurs requires introspection, and other research shows
that introspective estimates of event timing are not accurate, 2) simple finger
movements may be performed without much conscious thought and certainly are not
representative of the conscious decisions and choices required in high-speed
conversation or situations where the unconscious mind cannot know ahead of time
what to do, and 3) the brain activity
measures used were primitive and incomplete. I identified 12 categories
of what I regarded as flawed thinking about free will.
Conflicting evidence was available too. Christoph Herrmann
and colleagues had reported a study in which subjects were instructed to press
one of two buttons, depending on the presented stimulus. They found neural
activity preceding the motor response, similar to Libet's experiments. However,
this activity was already present prior to stimulus presentation, and thus
before participants could decide which button to press. They therefore
concluded that this activity does not specifically determine behavior, but more
likely reflects a general expectation or preparation for making a choice.
The major flaw in the robot theory is the assumption that conscious
choice is a point process that can be quantified in fractions of one second.
Yet, real-world willed actions are not instantaneous but often smeared out over
long periods of time. In addition, there is overwhelming evidence of a
substantial lag between when a conscious decision or choice is made and when it
becomes recognized as such.
Soon after my paper, several investigators reported studies
that challenged the robot view. For example, Trevena and Miller modified the
Libet design to include instructing subjects to occasionally make a decision not
to press the button. They saw the same antecedent brain activity
irrespective of whether the decision was to move or not to move. Clearly, the antecedent
brain activity is not specific to intention to move. The results do not,
however, rule out the possibility that unconscious mind makes all decisions
(including not to move, in this case),
So, just what does this activity prior to conscious
realization represent? No one really knows. In all likelihood, it can reflect
the initiation of actions consciously chosen prior to the experiment, or as I
put it, consciously following the experimental protocol’s “rules of the game.” The participants’ reported decision time may
just reflect the conscious confirming recognition and re-approval of the
initiated action. Sheffield and colleagues (2011) recently showed that neurons
can integrate spikes over a period of minutes, slowly reaching a threshold that
later produces persistent activity without any additional input.
First of all, I find it interesting that this question is even
discussed by any scholars other than philosophers. This is because free will is not a scientific
question. Science requires that an idea or hypothesis has to be framed as
falsifiable. Is any theory about free will really falsifiable? I would argue that this is a metaphysical
question and one for which we lack the tools to fully understand. Like Immanuel Kant, I think we will always be
blinded by the spectacles of our own human reason.
Secondly, to hold the robot view, especially on the basis of
problematic evidence, is personally and socially unwise, even dangerous. And
the problem is that laymen increasingly seem to embrace the position of the scholars.
In such areas as education, criminal justice, and politics, personal
responsibility is old fashioned, so yesterday.
Take education. Everybody recognizes that schools are in trouble.
But nobody holds students and their parents responsible for poor performance.
No, the blame is placed on insufficient funding, teachers, school boards, state
and local government.
Take criminal justice. It is growing practice among defense attorneys
to seize upon any indication of a brain dysfunction to get their client off or
have a reduced sentence. Judges and juries often buy the argument. The latest
science fad of brain scans has hit the courtrooms. If a scan is different from
normal, that must then be reason for the crime. For example, one survey of a
few murderers showed that they had abnormal brain scans. That was interpreted
to explain the crimes. But nobody raised the possibility that the abnormal
brain scan might have been caused by what the murder thought and did over the
many years before the crime. This, despite the clearly established fact that what
a person experiences, thinks, and does changes the brain structurally and
chemically.
Then, there is politics. Democrats are big on “social
justice” and particularly encourage people to think of themselves as members of
a group that is unfairly treated. Life
is not fair, and if people can be convinced they are victims of one sort or another,
politicians get votes by appealing to them as their protector. So the mantra
goes like this: blacks and Hispanics are oppressed by Anglo racists, the poor by exploiting rich people, workers by greedy business owners, women by chauvinistic men, gays by
homophobic straights, college students by those who set tuition rates. Everybody is encouraged to
think of themselves as members of an oppressed group, bitter and envious, and
in need of help from liberal politicians to get justice.
It is very comforting to believe that the adversities of
life or even your own poor choices are not your fault. If you are not responsible,
you get to blame something or somebody else. How convenient.
In terms of how the brain works, unconscious and conscious
minds interact and share duties. Unconscious mind governs simple or
well-learned tasks, like habits or ingrained prejudices, while conscious mind
deals with tasks that are complex or novel, like first learning to ride a bike
or play sheet music."
We do often act like robots driven by our unconscious drives
when we act out of habit, prejudice, or prior conditioning. But we should and
can be responsible for what we make of our brains and for the choices in life
we make. In a free-will world, people can choose to extricate themselves from
many kinds of misfortune―not to mention make the right choices that can prevent
misfortune.
Brain activity causes other brain activity that results in
intentions, decisions, choices, and assorted behaviors. Consciousness arises
from and is part of brain activity. Therefore, the brain activity of
consciousness can cause and modify other brain activity. People are personally responsible
because they have a conscious mind with the power to program the brain and its
unconscious mind.
Sources:
Herrmann, C. S. et al (2008). Analysis of a choice-reaction
task yields a new interpretation of Libet’s experiments. International J.
Psychophysiology. 67: 151-157.
Klemm, W. R. (2010). Free will debates: simple experiments
are not so simple. Advances in Cognitive Psychology. 6: (6) 47-65.
Roskies, A. L. (2010). Why Libet’s studies don’t pose a
threat to free will. In W. Sinnott-
Armstrong & L. Nadel (Eds.), Conscious will and responsibility
(pp. 11-22). New York:
Oxford University Press.
Sheffield, M. E. et al. (2011). Slow integration leads to
persistent action potential firing in distal axons of coupled interneurons.
Nature Neuroscience, 14(2), 200-207. doi:10.1038/nn.2728
Trevena, J., and Miller, J. (2010). Brain preparation before
a voluntary action: evidence against unconscious movement initiation.
Consciousness and Cognition. 19 (1): 447-456.