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The Best Books on Free Will and Neuroscience — What the Science Actually Shows

The neuroscience of free will is one of the most misrepresented fields in popular science. The Libet experiments are routinely cited as proof that free will is an illusion. They show something more interesting and less conclusive than that.

The Essential Reading

Both sides — taken seriously

Free Will — Sam Harris: The strongest popular case for the position that free will is an illusion. Short, clear, and genuinely challenging.
Elbow Room — Daniel Dennett: The most rigorous compatibilist account — free will properly understood is compatible with determinism.
The Illusion of Conscious Will — Daniel Wegner: The psychological research on the experience of willing — why the feeling of free will is often a post-hoc construction.
Determined — Robert Sapolsky: The most comprehensive recent case for hard determinism. Every behavior traced through neuroscience, hormones, genetics, and environment.
Free Will and Neuroscience — Walter Glannon: The most philosophically rigorous engagement with what the neuroscience actually shows about agency.

The Framework Account

Genuine agency — derivative and real simultaneously

Libet himself noted that participants retained the ability to veto the movement after becoming aware of the intention — what he called free won't. The conscious mind could cancel what the brain had initiated. That is not the elimination of agency. It is a different architecture of agency than most people assumed.

The Infinitely Simple framework holds that genuine agency is real — not illusory. You have real choice. Authentic will. True freedom. But the capacity for that agency is not self-originating. It derives from the operational properties of the Necessary Foundation expressing through the structural correspondence of your particular form. The agency is real. Its ground is not the creature itself. Both true simultaneously.

Read the book

Infinitely Simple: The Foundation — nine chapters, first principles, no assumptions. The guided practice applies it to the brain and body. Free on YouTube.

Where This Leads

This is one thread of a single argument.

Everything in this library traces back to one framework, built from the ground up from the single fact you cannot deny. If this resonated, start where it starts — Chapter One, free, delivered over seven mornings.

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