Your Mysterious Brain
BBC Earth|Volume 14 - Issue 2
Science has mapped the surface of Mars and translated the code for life. By comparison, we know next to nothing about what’s between our ears. Over the next few pages, we ask leading scientists to answer some of the most important questions about our brains…
Your Mysterious Brain
Do we really have free will?

DR LISA FELDMAN BARRETT

Lisa is a professor of psychology at Northeastern University. Her latest book is Seven And A Half Lessons About The Brain (£14.99, Picador).

The question of free will is still hotly debated. On the one hand, we clearly experience ourselves as able to make choices and freely act on them. If you fancy some crisps, you can choose to walk into a shop, buy a packet and eat them. Or you can choose to eat a pastry, a salad, or nothing at all. This certainly feels like free will.

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Denne historien er fra Volume 14 - Issue 2-utgaven av BBC Earth.

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The Big Burnout
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Putting Nature To Rights
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More countries are enshrining the right to a clean environment into law. So if a company or government is impinging upon that right, you could take them to court

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Mega Spaceship: Is It Possible For China To Build A Kilometre-Long Spacecraft?
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Your Mysterious Brain
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