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Originally Posted by Joe Spinebuster Maybe I'm missing something here, so apologies if I'm coming across like an idiot - I intentionally make this not my frield of expertise, because I fear that understanding the inner-workings of decision-making a bit too much would make life that little bit duller, which is a bit gay I know but sometimes ignorance is just how I roll - BUT how does establishing that the brain makes decisions a few seconds more before we actually execute them prove that "free will is an illusion"...? I admit I've only read a couple of posts in this thread, haven't clicked on any links or anything yet. |
It doesn't prove it at all. It's just one possible conclusion we could extrapolate from this research.
The crucial part is not that the brain is making decisions a few seconds before we execute them, it's that the brain is making decisions a few seconds before we are consciously aware that we are even going to think about executing them.
Most people would imagine the process goes something like - you consciously decide to act -> the conscious part of your brain tells the rest of your brain what to do -> you carry out the action
This suggests it's more like - an unconscious part of your mind (kinda, for the sake of analogy, like the part of your mind that deals with your breathing) makes the decision to act -> IT executes it -> it enters your consciousness as an afterthought, with the illusion that your conscious mind was responsible